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ATXN1

The autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxias (ADCA) are a heterogeneous group of neurodegenerative disorders characterized by progressive degeneration of the cerebellum, brain stem and spinal cord. Clinically, ADCA has been divided into three groups: ADCA types I-III. ADCAI is genetically heterogeneous, with five genetic loci, designated spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA) 1, 2, 3, 4 and 6, being assigned to five different chromosomes. ADCAII, which always presents with retinal degeneration (SCA7), and ADCAIII often referred to as the `pure' cerebellar syndrome (SCA5), are most likely homogeneous disorders. Several SCA genes have been cloned and shown to contain CAG repeats in their coding regions. ADCA is caused by the expansion of the CAG repeats, producing an elongated polyglutamine tract in the corresponding protein. The expanded repeats are variable in size and unstable, usually increasing in size when transmitted to successive generations. The function of the ataxins is not known. This locus has been mapped to chromosome 6, and it has been determined that the diseased allele contains 40-83 CAG repeats, compared to 6-39 in the normal allele, and is associated with spinocerebellar ataxia type 1 (SCA1). Alternative splicing results in multiple transcript variants, with one variant encoding multiple distinct proteins, ATXN1 and Alt-ATXN1, due to the use of overlapping alternate reading frames.
Protein class

Disease related genes, Human disease related genes

Predicted location

Intracellular

Single cell type specificity

Cell type enhanced (Excitatory neurons, Inhibitory neurons, Oligodendrocytes, Oligodendrocyte precursor cells)

Immune cell specificity

Low immune cell specificity

Cell line specificity

Cell line enhanced (U-266/70)

Interaction

Homooligomer (PubMed:9097953). Interacts with CIC (By similarity). Interacts with ANP32A, PQBP1, UBQLN4, ATXN1L and USP7 (PubMed:9353121, PubMed:11001934, PubMed:12062018, PubMed:12093161, PubMed:16121196). Directly interacts with RBPJ; this interaction is disrupted in the presence of Notch intracellular domain. Competes with ATXN1L for RBPJ-binding (PubMed:21475249). Found in a complex with CIC and ATXN1L (By similarity).

Molecular function

DNA-binding, Repressor, RNA-binding

More Types Infomation

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For Research Use Only. Not For Clinical Use.

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