UPF3A

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

Regulator of nonsense transcripts 3A is a protein that in humans is encoded by the UPF3A gene.[4][5][6]

PDBOrtholog search: PDBe RCSB
AliasesUPF3A, HRENT3A, UPF3, UPF3 regulator of nonsense transcripts homolog A (yeast), regulator of nonsense mediated mRNA decay
Chr.Chromosome 8 (mouse)[1]
Quick facts Available structures, PDB ...
UPF3A
Available structures
PDBOrtholog search: PDBe RCSB
Identifiers
AliasesUPF3A, HRENT3A, UPF3, UPF3 regulator of nonsense transcripts homolog A (yeast), regulator of nonsense mediated mRNA decay
External IDsOMIM: 605530; MGI: 1914281; HomoloGene: 23395; GeneCards: UPF3A; OMA:UPF3A - orthologs
Orthologs
SpeciesHumanMouse
Entrez
Ensembl
UniProt
RefSeq (mRNA)

NM_023011
NM_080687

NM_025924

RefSeq (protein)

NP_080200

Location (UCSC)n/aChr 8: 13.84 – 13.85 Mb
PubMed search[2][3]
Wikidata
View/Edit HumanView/Edit Mouse
Close

This gene encodes a protein that is part of a post-splicing multiprotein complex involved in both mRNA nuclear export and mRNA surveillance. The encoded protein is one of two functional homologs to yeast Upf3p. mRNA surveillance detects exported mRNAs with truncated open reading frames and initiates nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD). When translation ends upstream from the last exon-exon junction, this triggers NMD to degrade mRNAs containing premature stop codons. This protein binds to the mRNA and remains bound after nuclear export, acting as a nucleocytoplasmic shuttling protein. It complexes with RBM8A to bind specifically 20 nt upstream of exon-exon junctions. This gene is located on the long arm of chromosome 13. Two splice variants encoding different isoforms exist.[6]

Interactions

References

Further reading

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI