AI Article Synopsis

  • A protein called GANP, which is 210kDa, is found at higher levels in germinal center (GC)-B cells in the spleens of mice that have been immunized with antigens.
  • The human gene for GANP (hganp) produces a protein with 1980 amino acids, with a specific segment of 721 amino acids being the same as a related protein (Map80) thought to arise from alternative splicing.
  • The hganp gene is located on chromosome 21q22.3, and its mRNA is predominantly expressed in certain tissues like the tonsils, suggesting it plays a role in the regulation of cell-cycle progression and DNA replication in GC-B cells.

Article Abstract

A 210kDa protein named GANP is upregulated in germinal center (GC)-B cells in the spleen of antigen-immunized mouse. We studied a human ganp gene (hganp) encoding a putative polypeptide of 1980 amino acids. The carboxyl-terminal 721-amino-acid sequence of hGANP is identical to Map80, that is presumably generated by alternative splicing of hganp/Map80 gene. The genomic segment carrying hganp and Map80 genes was isolated, and the chromosomal location was determined on 21q22.3. Northern blot analysis with RNAs from various organs demonstrated a single band of 7kb hganp mRNA, which suggests a preferential transcription of hganp gene from the hganp/Map80 locus. The hGANP expression was upregulated in GCs of the tonsil, as demonstrated by in-situ RNA hybridization and immunohistochemical analyses. The hGANP, with the domain (Map-box) capable of binding to MCM3 in B cells, might be involved in regulation of cell-cycle progression and DNA replication of GC-B cells.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0378-1119(00)00336-xDOI Listing

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