LRRC8D

Protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Leucine-rich repeat-containing protein 8D is a protein that in humans is encoded by the LRRC8D gene.[5] Researchers have found out that this protein, along with the other LRRC8 proteins LRRC8A, LRRC8B, LRRC8C, and LRRC8E, is a subunit of the heteromer protein Volume-Regulated Anion Channel.[6] Volume-Regulated Anion Channels (VRACs) are crucial to the regulation of cell size by transporting chloride ions and various organic osmolytes, such as taurine or glutamate, across the plasma membrane,[7] and that is not the only function these channels have been linked to.

AliasesLRRC8D, LRRC5, leucine-rich repeat containing 8 family member D, leucine rich repeat containing 8 family member D, leucine rich repeat containing 8 VRAC subunit D, HsLRRC8D
End89,936,611 bp[1]
Quick facts Identifiers, Aliases ...
LRRC8D
Identifiers
AliasesLRRC8D, LRRC5, leucine-rich repeat containing 8 family member D, leucine rich repeat containing 8 family member D, leucine rich repeat containing 8 VRAC subunit D, HsLRRC8D
External IDsOMIM: 612890; MGI: 1922368; HomoloGene: 10004; GeneCards: LRRC8D; OMA:LRRC8D - orthologs
Orthologs
SpeciesHumanMouse
Entrez
Ensembl
UniProt
RefSeq (mRNA)

NM_001134479
NM_018103

NM_001122768
NM_178701

RefSeq (protein)

NP_001127951
NP_060573

NP_001116240
NP_848816

Location (UCSC)Chr 1: 89.82 – 89.94 MbChr 5: 105.85 – 105.98 Mb
PubMed search[3][4]
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While LRRC8D is one of many proteins that can be part of VRAC, it is in fact one of the most important subunits for the channel's ability to function; the other protein of importance is LRRC8A.[8][9] However, while we know it is necessary for specific VRAC function, other studies have found that it is not sufficient for the full range of usual VRAC activity.[10] This is where the other LRRC8 proteins come in, as the different composition of these subunits affects the range of specificity for VRACs.[11][12]

In addition to its role in VRACs, the LRRC8 protein family is also associated with agammaglobulinemia-5.[13]

References

Further reading

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