CDCA7: Difference between revisions

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{{PBB_Summary
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| summary_text = This gene was identified as a c-Myc responsive gene, and behaves as a direct c-Myc target gene. Overexpression of this gene is found to enhance the transformation of lymphoblastoid cells, and it complements a transformation-defective Myc Box II mutant, suggesting its involvement in c-Myc-mediated cell transformation. Two alternatively spliced transcript variants encoding distinct isoforms have been reported.<ref name="entrez" />
| summary_text = This gene was identified as a [[c-Myc]] responsive gene, and behaves as a direct c-Myc target gene. Overexpression of this gene is found to enhance the transformation of lymphoblastoid cells, and it complements a transformation-defective Myc Box II mutant, suggesting its involvement in c-Myc-mediated cell transformation. Two alternatively spliced transcript variants encoding distinct isoforms have been reported.<ref name="entrez" />
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Latest revision as of 21:11, 19 December 2017

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Identifiers
Aliases
External IDsGeneCards: [1]
Orthologs
SpeciesHumanMouse
Entrez
Ensembl
UniProt
RefSeq (mRNA)

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RefSeq (protein)

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Location (UCSC)n/an/a
PubMed searchn/an/a
Wikidata
View/Edit Human

Cell division cycle-associated protein 7 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the CDCA7 gene.[1][2][3]

This gene was identified as a c-Myc responsive gene, and behaves as a direct c-Myc target gene. Overexpression of this gene is found to enhance the transformation of lymphoblastoid cells, and it complements a transformation-defective Myc Box II mutant, suggesting its involvement in c-Myc-mediated cell transformation. Two alternatively spliced transcript variants encoding distinct isoforms have been reported.[3]

References

  1. Prescott JE, Osthus RC, Lee LA, Lewis BC, Shim H, Barrett JF, Guo Q, Hawkins AL, Griffin CA, Dang CV (Dec 2001). "A novel c-Myc-responsive gene, JPO1, participates in neoplastic transformation". J Biol Chem. 276 (51): 48276–84. doi:10.1074/jbc.M107357200. PMID 11598121.
  2. Walker MG (Aug 2002). "Drug target discovery by gene expression analysis: cell cycle genes". Curr Cancer Drug Targets. 1 (1): 73–83. doi:10.2174/1568009013334241. PMID 12188893.
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Entrez Gene: CDCA7 cell division cycle associated 7".

External links

Further reading