The protein contains 251 amino acids for an estimated molecular weight of 28788 Da.
Multifunctional protein that is involved in the regulation of many processes including cell proliferation, apoptosis, cell cycle progression or transcription (PubMed:20015864, PubMed:18039846). Regulates the proliferation of neuronal stem cells, differentiation of leukemic cells and progression from G1 to S phase of the cell cycle. As negative regulator of caspase-3-dependent apoptosis, may act as an antagonist of ANP32A in regulating tissue homeostasis (PubMed:20015864). Exhibits histone chaperone properties, able to recruit histones to certain promoters, thus regulating the transcription of specific genes (PubMed:20538007, PubMed:18039846). Plays also an essential role in the nucleocytoplasmic transport of specific mRNAs via the uncommon nuclear mRNA export receptor XPO1/CRM1 (PubMed:17178712). Participates in the regulation of adequate adaptive immune responses by acting on mRNA expression and cell proliferation (By similarity).', '(Microbial infection) Plays an essential role in influenza A and B viral genome replication (PubMed:33045004, PubMed:31217244). Plays also a role in foamy virus mRNA export from the nucleus to the cytoplasm (PubMed:21159877). (updated: April 7, 2021)
Protein identification was indicated in the following studies:
The following articles were analysed to gather the proteome content of erythrocytes.
The gene or protein list provided in the studies were processed using the ID mapping API of Uniprot in September 2018. The number of proteins identified and mapped without ambiguity in these studies is indicated below.
Only Swiss-Prot entries (reviewed) were considered for protein evidence assignation.
Publication | Identification 1 | Uniprot mapping 2 | Not mapped / Obsolete | TrEMBL | Swiss-Prot |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Goodman (2013) | 2289 (gene list) | 2278 | 53 | 20599 | 2269 |
Lange (2014) | 1234 | 1234 | 7 | 28 | 1224 |
Hegedus (2015) | 2638 | 2622 | 0 | 235 | 2387 |
Wilson (2016) | 1658 | 1528 | 170 | 291 | 1068 |
d'Alessandro (2017) | 1826 | 1817 | 2 | 0 | 1815 |
Bryk (2017) | 2090 | 2060 | 10 | 108 | 1942 |
Chu (2018) | 1853 | 1804 | 55 | 362 | 1387 |
1 as available in the article and/or in supplementary material
2 uniprot mapping returns all protein isoforms as one entry
The compilation of older studies can be retrieved from the Red Blood Cell Collection database.
The data and differentiation stages presented below come from the proteomic study and analysis performed by our partners of the GReX consortium, more details are available in their published work.
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April 10, 2021: Protein entry updated
Automatic update: Entry updated from uniprot information.
Feb. 2, 2018: Protein entry updated
Automatic update: Uniprot description updated
Dec. 19, 2017: Protein entry updated
Automatic update: Uniprot description updated
Nov. 23, 2017: Protein entry updated
Automatic update: Uniprot description updated
June 20, 2017: Protein entry updated
Automatic update: comparative model was added.
Feb. 24, 2016: Protein entry updated
Automatic update: model status changed