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CCNE1

Anti-CCNE1 Recombinant Antibody Products

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For Research Use Only. Not For Clinical Use.


The protein encoded by this gene belongs to the highly conserved cyclin family, whose members are characterized by a dramatic periodicity in protein abundance through the cell cycle. Cyclins function as regulators of CDK kinases. Different cyclins exhibit distinct expression and degradation patterns which contribute to the temporal coordination of each mitotic event. This cyclin forms a complex with and functions as a regulatory subunit of CDK2, whose activity is required for cell cycle G1/S transition. This protein accumulates at the G1-S phase boundary and is degraded as cells progress through S phase. Overexpression of this gene has been observed in many tumors, which results in chromosome instability, and thus may contribute to tumorigenesis. This protein was found to associate with, and be involved in, the phosphorylation of NPAT protein (nuclear protein mapped to the ATM locus), which participates in cell-cycle regulated histone gene expression and plays a critical role in promoting cell-cycle progression in the absence of pRB.
Protein class

Cancer-related genes, Human disease related genes

Predicted location

Intracellular

Single cell type specificity

Cell type enriched (Extravillous trophoblasts)

Immune cell specificity

Not detected in immune cells

Cell line specificity

Cell line enhanced (BEWO)

Interaction

Interacts with CDK2 protein kinase to form a serine/threonine kinase holoenzyme complex. The cyclin subunit imparts substrate specificity to the complex (PubMed:15660127). Found in a complex with CDK2, CABLES1 and CCNA1 (By similarity). Part of a complex consisting of UHRF2, CDK2 and CCNE1 (PubMed:15178429). Interacts directly with UHRF2; the interaction ubiquitinates CCNE1 and appears to occur independently of CCNE1 phosphorylation (PubMed:21952639). Interacts with INCA1 (PubMed:21540187).

Molecular function

Cyclin

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