Publication | Open Access
The LDL Receptor Gene: A Mosaic of Exons Shared with Different Proteins
852
Citations
44
References
1985
Year
GeneticsImmunologyMolecular BiologyDisease Gene IdentificationProtein GeneticsProtein ExpressionCoated Pit ReceptorsLdl Receptor GeneProteomicsExons SharedProtein FunctionG Protein-coupled ReceptorReceptor (Biochemistry)Mosaic ProteinGene ExpressionCell BiologySignal TransductionDifferent ProteinsNatural SciencesLdl ReceptorSystems BiologyMedicine
The multifunctional nature of coated pit receptors predicts that these proteins will contain multiple domains. To establish the genetic basis for these domains (LDL) receptor. This gene is more than 45 kilobases in length and contains 18 exons, most of which correlate with functional domains previously defined at the protein level. Thirteen of the 18 exons encode protein sequences that are homologous to sequences in other proteins: five of these exons encode a sequence similar to one in the C9 component of complement; three exons encode a sequence similar to a repeat sequence in the precursor for epidermal growth factor (EGF) and in three proteins of the blood clotting system (factor IX, factor X, and protein C); and five other exons encode nonrepeated sequences that are shared only with the EGF precursor. The LDL receptor appears to be a mosaic protein built up of exons shared with different proteins, and it therefore belongs to several supergene families.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1