CAPN10

Protein-coding gene in humans From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Calpain-10 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the CAPN10 gene.[5][6]

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CAPN10
Identifiers
AliasesCAPN10, CANP10, NIDDM1, calpain 10
External IDsOMIM: 605286; MGI: 1344392; HomoloGene: 36323; GeneCards: CAPN10; OMA:CAPN10 - orthologs
Orthologs
SpeciesHumanMouse
Entrez
Ensembl
UniProt
RefSeq (mRNA)

NM_011796

RefSeq (protein)

NP_075571
NP_075573

NP_035926

Location (UCSC)Chr 2: 240.59 – 240.62 MbChr 1: 92.86 – 92.88 Mb
PubMed search[3][4]
Wikidata
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Overview

Calpains are ubiquitous, well-conserved family of calcium-dependent, cysteine proteases. The typical calpain proteins are heterodimers consisting of an invariant small subunit and variable large subunits. The large catalytic subunit has four domains: domain I, the N-terminal regulatory domain that is processed upon calpain activation; domain II, the protease domain; domain III, a linker domain of unknown function; and domain IV, the calmodulin-like calcium-binding domain. The heterodimer interface is predominantly found between domain IV and the small subunit, which is also a calmodulin-like calcium-binding domain. This gene encodes a large subunit. It is an atypical calpain in that it lacks the calmodulin-like calcium-binding domain and instead has a divergent C-terminal domain. It therefore cannot heterodimerize with the small subunit. It is similar in organization to calpains 5 and 6. This gene is associated with type 2 or non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) and located within the NIDDM1 region. Multiple alternative transcript variants encoding different isoforms have been described for this gene.[7]

References

Further reading

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