DGCR8

DGCR8
Available structures
PDBOrtholog search: PDBe RCSB
Identifiers
Aliases DGCR8, C22orf12, DGCRK6, Gy1, pasha, Pasha, DGCR8 microprocessor complex subunit
External IDs MGI: 2151114 HomoloGene: 11223 GeneCards: DGCR8
RNA expression pattern




More reference expression data
Orthologs
Species Human Mouse
Entrez

54487

94223

Ensembl

ENSG00000128191

n/a

UniProt

Q8WYQ5

Q9EQM6

RefSeq (mRNA)

NM_001190326
NM_022720

NM_033324

RefSeq (protein)

NP_001177255.1
NP_073557.3

NP_201581.2

Location (UCSC) Chr 22: 20.08 – 20.11 Mb Chr 16: 18.25 – 18.29 Mb
PubMed search [1] [2]
Wikidata
View/Edit HumanView/Edit Mouse

The DGCR8 microprocessor complex subunit (DiGeorge syndrome chromosomal [or critical] region 8) is a protein that in humans is encoded by the DGCR8 gene.[3] In other animals, particularly the common model organisms Drosophila melanogaster and Caenorhabditis elegans, the protein is known as Pasha (partner of Drosha).[4] It is a required component of the RNA interference pathway.

Function

DGCR8 is localized to the cell nucleus and is required for microRNA (miRNA) processing. It binds to Drosha, an RNase III enzyme, to form the Microprocessor complex that cleaves a primary transcript known as pri-miRNA to a characteristic stem-loop structure known as a pre-miRNA, which is then further processed to miRNA fragments by the enzyme Dicer. DGCR8 contains an RNA-binding domain and is thought to bind pri-miRNA to stabilize it for processing by Drosha.[5]

References

  1. "Human PubMed Reference:".
  2. "Mouse PubMed Reference:".
  3. "Entrez Gene: DGCR8 DiGeorge syndrome critical region gene 8".
  4. Denli AM, Tops BB, Plasterk RH, Ketting RF, Hannon GJ (Nov 2004). "Processing of primary microRNAs by the Microprocessor complex". Nature. 432 (7014): 231–5. doi:10.1038/nature03049. PMID 15531879.
  5. Yeom KH, Lee Y, Han J, Suh MR, Kim VN (2006). "Characterization of DGCR8/Pasha, the essential cofactor for Drosha in primary miRNA processing". Nucleic Acids Research. 34 (16): 4622–9. doi:10.1093/nar/gkl458. PMC 1636349Freely accessible. PMID 16963499.

Further reading


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