fbpx
Wikipedia

STIL

SCL-interrupting locus protein is a protein that in humans is encoded by the STIL gene. STIL is present in many different cell types and is essential for centriole biogenesis. This gene encodes a cytoplasmic protein implicated in regulation of the mitotic spindle checkpoint, a regulatory pathway that monitors chromosome segregation during cell division to ensure the proper distribution of chromosomes to daughter cells. The protein is phosphorylated in mitosis and in response to activation of the spindle checkpoint, and disappears when cells transition to G1 phase. It interacts with a mitotic regulator, and its expression is required to efficiently activate the spindle checkpoint.

STIL
Available structures
PDBOrtholog search: PDBe RCSB
Identifiers
AliasesSTIL, MCPH7, SIL, SCL/TAL1 interrupting locus, centriolar assembly protein, STIL centriolar assembly protein
External IDsOMIM: 181590 MGI: 107477 HomoloGene: 2283 GeneCards: STIL
Orthologs
SpeciesHumanMouse
Entrez
Ensembl
UniProt
RefSeq (mRNA)

NM_009185
NM_001304551
NM_001304553
NM_001304555
NM_001304559

RefSeq (protein)

NP_001291480
NP_001291482
NP_001291484
NP_001291488
NP_033211

Location (UCSC)Chr 1: 47.25 – 47.31 MbChr 4: 114.86 – 114.9 Mb
PubMed search[3][4]
Wikidata
View/Edit HumanView/Edit Mouse

It is proposed to regulate Cdc2 kinase activity during spindle checkpoint arrest. Chromosomal deletions that fuse this gene and the adjacent locus commonly occur in T cell leukemias, and are thought to arise through illegitimate recombination events. Multiple transcript variants encoding different isoforms have been found for this gene. Multiple types of cancer produce STIL, and its expression is linked to an increased mitotic index and cancer development.[5] Hedgehog family-mediated signaling events are one of its associated pathways. The development and function of the nervous system are impacted by STIL.[6] The sequence of STIL gene is highly conserved in vertebrate species .Both fetal and adult tissues express the STIL gene. Its expression levels fluctuate with the cell cycle, making it challenging to detect in a complete tissue, particularly if the cells are not synchronized.

Gene location edit

The human STIL gene is located on the (p) arm of chromosome 1. It mapped the STIL gene to chromosome 1p33 based on an alignment of the STIL sequence with the genomic sequence. STIL gene contains 20 exons, including alternatively spliced exons 13A and 13B and 18A and 18B. The coding region begins in exon 3. The human SIL gene encodes a 1287-amino acid cytosolic protein.

Functions and mechanism edit

Numerous cancer types are affected by STIL overexpression which has been linked to chromosomal instability. It plays a part in neural development and function. STIL plays a crucial role in cell mitosis and centriole replication. The early stages of the cell cycle see a slow increase in STIL expression, a peak in the middle, and a sharp decline in the latter stages. When cellular proliferation is inhibited by serum deprivation, contact inhibition, or the promotion of terminal differentiation, STIL is expressed in the proliferating cells and is down-regulated. STIL has been interacted with CDK1, PLK4, and SAS-6. STIL has a role in the Sonic hedgehog (Shh) pathway. STIL regulates the transcription of Shh-target gene Gli1[7] .The suppressor-of-fused homolog (SUFU) and GLI1 are examples of conserved Shh signaling elements with which the C terminus of STIL can engage. The activation of Shh-GLI1 cascades is caused by STIL's interaction with SUFU, which prevents SUFU from acting as a repressor of GLI1.

Normally, GLI1 binds to the cytoplasmic protein SUFU to form heterodimers. The transcription of the Gli1 gene is blocked because the heterodimers cannot be translocated to  nucleus. The binding of SUFU by STIL during STIL expression releases GLI1 from SUFU repression. Gene transcription can then begin as GLI1 enters the nucleus. The transcription of Gli1 cannot begin if STIL is altered. Normally, STIL to bind SUFU, relieve SUFU's inhibition of GLI1, and then allow GLI1 to go to the nucleus for gene transcription. The inability of the SUFU-GLI1 heterodimers prevents the completion of Shh downstream signaling transduction when STIL is mutated.

Role of STIL in cancer edit

Numerous malignancies have been identified to have STIL disorders, which have fueled carcinogenesis. Copy number variation, mutation, and DNA methylation all had an impact on STIL's dysregulated expression. The expression of STIL was inversely linked with numerous ciliogenesis-related genes. The equilibrium of STIL expression is crucial for the development of primary cilia. STIL silencing might facilitate the development of primary cilia and prevent the production of cell cycle-related proteins. There are no primary cilia when STIL expression is completely lost. Increased cancer metastatic potential is linked to STIL overexpression. STIL has associated with various cancers including lung cancer, colon cancer, pancreatic cancer, prostate adenocarcinoma, and ovarian cancer. The production of mitotic spindles, as well as SHH signaling and the operation of its interactors, are all likely impacted by STIL overexpression, which is linked to a high histopathological mitotic index in tumors. Overexpression of STIL may function as oncogenes and cause cancer by encouraging spindle abnormalities. Spindle orientation control is lost due to disordered mitotic spindles caused by STIL downregulation. This may lead to a reduction in the number of cortical progenitors by cell death or premature differentiation. PLK4 overexpression also causes centrosome amplification and aneuploidy, which reduce brain volume as a result of cell death . Apoptosis inhibition in this setting results in an accumulation of aneuploid cells that are unable to proliferate effectively, causing premature neural differentiation, whereas PLK4 overexpression in environment induces skin cancer.

As a PLK4 downstream effector, STIL may possibly indirectly affect cancer. Malignancies such juvenile medulloblastoma, breast tumors, and colorectal cancer have all been linked to elevated PLK4 expression. Multiple organs develop spontaneous tumors as a result of PLK4 overexpression. It is unclear if STIL expression is necessary for this trait. PLK4 remodels the cytoskeleton and may be important for cancer invasion and metastasis because STIL binds to PLK4 in the cytoplasm. As a result, STIL expression levels may have an impact on PLK4 cytoplasmic activity. PLK4 depletion is associated with an increase in E-cadherin expression and a reduction in metastasis.

In addition to these conditions, CYCLIN B is frequently elevated in primary breast cancer, esophageal squamous cell carcinoma, laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma, and colorectal carcinoma. Downregulation of STIL inhibits tumor growth in vivo by lowering CDK1/CYCLIN B activity, delaying G2-M transition, and preventing G2-M transition. While elevating STIL might encourage CDK1/CYCLIN B activity and unintentionally contribute to CYCLIN B-dependent proliferation in tumor cells. The absence of STIL also causes an increase of Chfr and a decrease in PLK1, which activates the CDC25c phosphatase. Thus, this route may be able to regulate cell division independent of its essential function in centriole duplication.

Role of STIL in neural development edit

The pattern of STIL expression during the fetal stages supports the link between this gene and cell proliferation. At 15 postconceptional weeks, STIL is more strongly expressed in the ganglionic eminence, the rostral migratory stream, the ventricular and sub ventricular zones of the forebrain.[6] While it is less expressed in the intermediate zone, sub plate, cortical plate, marginal zone, and sub granular layer. The manifestation of this pattern is still present at 21 postconceptional weeks, but it is less prominent in the sub ventricular region.

Although the expression of SAS-6 and STIL differs in some areas of the cortical plate, PLK4, SAS-6, and CPAP also often exhibit this pattern of expression. The exterior granule layer and areas of the rhombic lip of the cerebellum express STIL, PLK4, and SAS-6 but not CPAP. However, none of these genes are expressed in the migratory streams of the hindbrain, the ventricular matrix zone of the cerebellum, or the transitory Purkinje cell cluster.

When the head circumference is less than the age-specific and gender-adjusted mean by more than two standard deviations (S.D.s) at birth, microcephaly (small brain size) is inferred. Primary microcephaly is the term used to describe genetic microcephalies that can be seen in pregnancy. The majority of them, known as microcephalic dwarfism, are autosomal recessive and include I solitary variants known as Microcephaly Primary Hereditary (MCPH), and (ii) types linked to growth retardation. A MCPH phenotype is linked to the majority of STIL mutations found in patients, and STIL is known as MCPH7. Both an increase and a decrease in STIL protein levels during the cell cycle have an impact on centriole control and cause microcephaly.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c GRCh38: Ensembl release 89: ENSG00000123473 - Ensembl, May 2017
  2. ^ a b c GRCm38: Ensembl release 89: ENSMUSG00000028718 - Ensembl, May 2017
  3. ^ "Human PubMed Reference:". National Center for Biotechnology Information, U.S. National Library of Medicine.
  4. ^ "Mouse PubMed Reference:". National Center for Biotechnology Information, U.S. National Library of Medicine.
  5. ^ Patwardhan, Dhruti; Mani, Shyamala; Passemard, Sandrine; Gressens, Pierre; El Ghouzzi, Vincent (2018-01-19). "STIL balancing primary microcephaly and cancer". Cell Death & Disease. 9 (2): 65. doi:10.1038/s41419-017-0101-9. ISSN 2041-4889. PMC 5833631. PMID 29352115.
  6. ^ a b Li, Lei; Liu, Congcong; Carr, Aprell L. (2019-04-25). "STIL: a multi-function protein required for dopaminergic neural proliferation, protection, and regeneration". Cell Death Discovery. 5 (1): 90. doi:10.1038/s41420-019-0172-8. ISSN 2058-7716. PMC 6484007. PMID 31044090.
  7. ^ Kasai, Kenji; Inaguma, Shingo; Yoneyama, Akiko; Yoshikawa, Kazuhiro; Ikeda, Hiroshi (2008-10-01). "SCL/TAL1 Interrupting Locus Derepresses GLI1 from the Negative Control of Suppressor-of-Fused in Pancreatic Cancer Cell". Cancer Research. 68 (19): 7723–7729. doi:10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-07-6661. ISSN 0008-5472. PMID 18829525.

Further reading edit

  • Aplan PD, Lombardi DP, Reaman GH, et al. (1992). "Involvement of the putative hematopoietic transcription factor SCL in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia". Blood. 79 (5): 1327–33. doi:10.1182/blood.V79.5.1327.1327. PMID 1311214.
  • Aplan PD, Lombardi DP, Kirsch IR (1991). "Structural characterization of SIL, a gene frequently disrupted in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia". Mol. Cell. Biol. 11 (11): 5462–9. doi:10.1128/MCB.11.11.5462. PMC 361915. PMID 1922059.
  • Jonsson OG, Kitchens RL, Baer RJ, et al. (1991). "Rearrangements of the tal-1 locus as clonal markers for T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia". J. Clin. Invest. 87 (6): 2029–35. doi:10.1172/JCI115232. PMC 296958. PMID 2040693.
  • Aplan PD, Lombardi DP, Ginsberg AM, et al. (1991). "Disruption of the human SCL locus by "illegitimate" V-(D)-J recombinase activity". Science. 250 (4986): 1426–9. doi:10.1126/science.2255914. PMID 2255914.
  • Kikuchi A, Hayashi Y, Kobayashi S, et al. (1993). "Clinical significance of TAL1 gene alteration in childhood T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia and lymphoma". Leukemia. 7 (7): 933–8. PMID 8321044.
  • Collazo-Garcia N, Scherer P, Aplan PD (1997). "Cloning and characterization of a murine SIL gene". Genomics. 30 (3): 506–13. doi:10.1006/geno.1995.1271. PMID 8825637.
  • Izraeli S, Colaizzo-Anas T, Bertness VL, et al. (1997). "Expression of the SIL gene is correlated with growth induction and cellular proliferation". Cell Growth Differ. 8 (11): 1171–9. PMID 9372240.
  • Göttgens B, Barton LM, Gilbert JG, et al. (2000). "Analysis of vertebrate SCL loci identifies conserved enhancers". Nat. Biotechnol. 18 (2): 181–6. doi:10.1038/72635. PMID 10657125. S2CID 27473560.
  • Raghavan SC, Kirsch IR, Lieber MR (2001). "Analysis of the V(D)J recombination efficiency at lymphoid chromosomal translocation breakpoints". J. Biol. Chem. 276 (31): 29126–33. doi:10.1074/jbc.M103797200. PMID 11390401.
  • Carlotti E, Pettenella F, Amaru R, et al. (2002). "Molecular characterization of a new recombination of the SIL/TAL-1 locus in a child with T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia". Br. J. Haematol. 118 (4): 1011–8. doi:10.1046/j.1365-2141.2002.03747.x. PMID 12199779. S2CID 20462278.
  • Karkera JD, Izraeli S, Roessler E, et al. (2003). "The genomic structure, chromosomal localization, and analysis of SIL as a candidate gene for holoprosencephaly". Cytogenet. Genome Res. 97 (1–2): 62–7. doi:10.1159/000064057. PMID 12438740. S2CID 33129304.
  • Strausberg RL, Feingold EA, Grouse LH, et al. (2003). "Generation and initial analysis of more than 15,000 full-length human and mouse cDNA sequences". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 99 (26): 16899–903. Bibcode:2002PNAS...9916899M. doi:10.1073/pnas.242603899. PMC 139241. PMID 12477932.
  • Colaizzo-Anas T, Aplan PD (2003). "Cloning and characterization of the SIL promoter". Biochim. Biophys. Acta. 1625 (2): 207–13. doi:10.1016/S0167-4781(02)00597-3. PMID 12531481.
  • Curry JD, Smith MT (2003). "Measurement of SIL-TAL1 fusion gene transcripts associated with human T-cell lymphocytic leukemia by real-time reverse transcriptase-PCR". Leuk. Res. 27 (7): 575–82. doi:10.1016/S0145-2126(02)00260-6. PMID 12681356.
  • Cavé H, Suciu S, Preudhomme C, et al. (2004). "Clinical significance of HOX11L2 expression linked to t(5;14)(q35;q32), of HOX11 expression, and of SIL-TAL fusion in childhood T-cell malignancies: results of EORTC studies 58881 and 58951". Blood. 103 (2): 442–50. doi:10.1182/blood-2003-05-1495. PMID 14504110.
  • Erez A, Perelman M, Hewitt SM, et al. (2004). "Sil overexpression in lung cancer characterizes tumors with increased mitotic activity". Oncogene. 23 (31): 5371–7. doi:10.1038/sj.onc.1207685. PMID 15107824.
  • Gerhard DS, Wagner L, Feingold EA, et al. (2004). "The Status, Quality, and Expansion of the NIH Full-Length cDNA Project: The Mammalian Gene Collection (MGC)". Genome Res. 14 (10B): 2121–7. doi:10.1101/gr.2596504. PMC 528928. PMID 15489334.
  • Campaner S, Kaldis P, Izraeli S, Kirsch IR (2005). "Sil Phosphorylation in a Pin1 Binding Domain Affects the Duration of the Spindle Checkpoint". Mol. Cell. Biol. 25 (15): 6660–72. doi:10.1128/MCB.25.15.6660-6672.2005. PMC 1190358. PMID 16024801.
  • Kimura K, Wakamatsu A, Suzuki Y, et al. (2006). "Diversification of transcriptional modulation: Large-scale identification and characterization of putative alternative promoters of human genes". Genome Res. 16 (1): 55–65. doi:10.1101/gr.4039406. PMC 1356129. PMID 16344560.
 Kumar A, Girimaji SC, Duvvari MR, Blanton SH (2009): Mutations in STIL, encoding a pericentriolar and centrosomal protein, cause primary microcephaly. American Journal of Human Genetics 84:286-290. 

External links edit

  • Overview of all the structural information available in the PDB for UniProt: Q15468 (SCL-interrupting locus protein) at the PDBe-KB.

stil, other, uses, stil, disambiguation, interrupting, locus, protein, protein, that, humans, encoded, gene, present, many, different, cell, types, essential, centriole, biogenesis, this, gene, encodes, cytoplasmic, protein, implicated, regulation, mitotic, sp. For other uses see stil disambiguation SCL interrupting locus protein is a protein that in humans is encoded by the STIL gene STIL is present in many different cell types and is essential for centriole biogenesis This gene encodes a cytoplasmic protein implicated in regulation of the mitotic spindle checkpoint a regulatory pathway that monitors chromosome segregation during cell division to ensure the proper distribution of chromosomes to daughter cells The protein is phosphorylated in mitosis and in response to activation of the spindle checkpoint and disappears when cells transition to G1 phase It interacts with a mitotic regulator and its expression is required to efficiently activate the spindle checkpoint STILAvailable structuresPDBOrtholog search PDBe RCSBList of PDB id codes4YYPIdentifiersAliasesSTIL MCPH7 SIL SCL TAL1 interrupting locus centriolar assembly protein STIL centriolar assembly proteinExternal IDsOMIM 181590 MGI 107477 HomoloGene 2283 GeneCards STILGene location Human Chr Chromosome 1 human 1 Band1p33Start47 250 139 bp 1 End47 314 892 bp 1 Gene location Mouse Chr Chromosome 4 mouse 2 Band4 4 D1Start114 857 356 bp 2 End114 900 393 bp 2 RNA expression patternBgeeHumanMouse ortholog Top expressed insecondary oocytespongy boneembryoamniotic fluidbone marrowbronchial epithelial cellbone marrow cellscavity of mouthtibiaganglionic eminenceTop expressed inmaxillary prominencespermatocyteseminiferous tubulemedial ganglionic eminencedermishair follicleabdominal wallatriuminternal carotid arteryexternal carotid arteryMore reference expression dataBioGPSMore reference expression dataGene ontologyMolecular functionprotein binding identical protein bindingCellular componentcytoplasm cytosol centrosome centriole cytoskeletonBiological processcentrosome duplication multicellular organism growth mitotic spindle organization notochord development embryonic axis specification negative regulation of apoptotic process in utero embryonic development floor plate development multicellular organism development heart looping neural tube closure determination of left right symmetry neural tube development protein localization to centrosome smoothened signaling pathway forebrain development cell population proliferation regulation of centriole replicationSources Amigo QuickGOOrthologsSpeciesHumanMouseEntrez649120460EnsemblENSG00000123473ENSMUSG00000028718UniProtQ15468Q7Z626Q60988RefSeq mRNA NM 001048166NM 001282936NM 001282937NM 001282938NM 001282939NM 003035NM 001377417NM 009185NM 001304551NM 001304553NM 001304555NM 001304559RefSeq protein NP 001041631NP 001269865NP 001269866NP 001269867NP 001269868NP 003026NP 001364346NP 001269866 1NP 001269868 1NP 001291480NP 001291482NP 001291484NP 001291488NP 033211Location UCSC Chr 1 47 25 47 31 MbChr 4 114 86 114 9 MbPubMed search 3 4 WikidataView Edit HumanView Edit MouseIt is proposed to regulate Cdc2 kinase activity during spindle checkpoint arrest Chromosomal deletions that fuse this gene and the adjacent locus commonly occur in T cell leukemias and are thought to arise through illegitimate recombination events Multiple transcript variants encoding different isoforms have been found for this gene Multiple types of cancer produce STIL and its expression is linked to an increased mitotic index and cancer development 5 Hedgehog family mediated signaling events are one of its associated pathways The development and function of the nervous system are impacted by STIL 6 The sequence of STIL gene is highly conserved in vertebrate species Both fetal and adult tissues express the STIL gene Its expression levels fluctuate with the cell cycle making it challenging to detect in a complete tissue particularly if the cells are not synchronized Contents 1 Gene location 2 Functions and mechanism 3 Role of STIL in cancer 4 Role of STIL in neural development 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksGene location editThe human STIL gene is located on the p arm of chromosome 1 It mapped the STIL gene to chromosome 1p33 based on an alignment of the STIL sequence with the genomic sequence STIL gene contains 20 exons including alternatively spliced exons 13A and 13B and 18A and 18B The coding region begins in exon 3 The human SIL gene encodes a 1287 amino acid cytosolic protein Functions and mechanism editNumerous cancer types are affected by STIL overexpression which has been linked to chromosomal instability It plays a part in neural development and function STIL plays a crucial role in cell mitosis and centriole replication The early stages of the cell cycle see a slow increase in STIL expression a peak in the middle and a sharp decline in the latter stages When cellular proliferation is inhibited by serum deprivation contact inhibition or the promotion of terminal differentiation STIL is expressed in the proliferating cells and is down regulated STIL has been interacted with CDK1 PLK4 and SAS 6 STIL has a role in the Sonic hedgehog Shh pathway STIL regulates the transcription of Shh target gene Gli1 7 The suppressor of fused homolog SUFU and GLI1 are examples of conserved Shh signaling elements with which the C terminus of STIL can engage The activation of Shh GLI1 cascades is caused by STIL s interaction with SUFU which prevents SUFU from acting as a repressor of GLI1 Normally GLI1 binds to the cytoplasmic protein SUFU to form heterodimers The transcription of the Gli1 gene is blocked because the heterodimers cannot be translocated to nucleus The binding of SUFU by STIL during STIL expression releases GLI1 from SUFU repression Gene transcription can then begin as GLI1 enters the nucleus The transcription of Gli1 cannot begin if STIL is altered Normally STIL to bind SUFU relieve SUFU s inhibition of GLI1 and then allow GLI1 to go to the nucleus for gene transcription The inability of the SUFU GLI1 heterodimers prevents the completion of Shh downstream signaling transduction when STIL is mutated Role of STIL in cancer editNumerous malignancies have been identified to have STIL disorders which have fueled carcinogenesis Copy number variation mutation and DNA methylation all had an impact on STIL s dysregulated expression The expression of STIL was inversely linked with numerous ciliogenesis related genes The equilibrium of STIL expression is crucial for the development of primary cilia STIL silencing might facilitate the development of primary cilia and prevent the production of cell cycle related proteins There are no primary cilia when STIL expression is completely lost Increased cancer metastatic potential is linked to STIL overexpression STIL has associated with various cancers including lung cancer colon cancer pancreatic cancer prostate adenocarcinoma and ovarian cancer The production of mitotic spindles as well as SHH signaling and the operation of its interactors are all likely impacted by STIL overexpression which is linked to a high histopathological mitotic index in tumors Overexpression of STIL may function as oncogenes and cause cancer by encouraging spindle abnormalities Spindle orientation control is lost due to disordered mitotic spindles caused by STIL downregulation This may lead to a reduction in the number of cortical progenitors by cell death or premature differentiation PLK4 overexpression also causes centrosome amplification and aneuploidy which reduce brain volume as a result of cell death Apoptosis inhibition in this setting results in an accumulation of aneuploid cells that are unable to proliferate effectively causing premature neural differentiation whereas PLK4 overexpression in environment induces skin cancer As a PLK4 downstream effector STIL may possibly indirectly affect cancer Malignancies such juvenile medulloblastoma breast tumors and colorectal cancer have all been linked to elevated PLK4 expression Multiple organs develop spontaneous tumors as a result of PLK4 overexpression It is unclear if STIL expression is necessary for this trait PLK4 remodels the cytoskeleton and may be important for cancer invasion and metastasis because STIL binds to PLK4 in the cytoplasm As a result STIL expression levels may have an impact on PLK4 cytoplasmic activity PLK4 depletion is associated with an increase in E cadherin expression and a reduction in metastasis In addition to these conditions CYCLIN B is frequently elevated in primary breast cancer esophageal squamous cell carcinoma laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma and colorectal carcinoma Downregulation of STIL inhibits tumor growth in vivo by lowering CDK1 CYCLIN B activity delaying G2 M transition and preventing G2 M transition While elevating STIL might encourage CDK1 CYCLIN B activity and unintentionally contribute to CYCLIN B dependent proliferation in tumor cells The absence of STIL also causes an increase of Chfr and a decrease in PLK1 which activates the CDC25c phosphatase Thus this route may be able to regulate cell division independent of its essential function in centriole duplication Role of STIL in neural development editThe pattern of STIL expression during the fetal stages supports the link between this gene and cell proliferation At 15 postconceptional weeks STIL is more strongly expressed in the ganglionic eminence the rostral migratory stream the ventricular and sub ventricular zones of the forebrain 6 While it is less expressed in the intermediate zone sub plate cortical plate marginal zone and sub granular layer The manifestation of this pattern is still present at 21 postconceptional weeks but it is less prominent in the sub ventricular region Although the expression of SAS 6 and STIL differs in some areas of the cortical plate PLK4 SAS 6 and CPAP also often exhibit this pattern of expression The exterior granule layer and areas of the rhombic lip of the cerebellum express STIL PLK4 and SAS 6 but not CPAP However none of these genes are expressed in the migratory streams of the hindbrain the ventricular matrix zone of the cerebellum or the transitory Purkinje cell cluster When the head circumference is less than the age specific and gender adjusted mean by more than two standard deviations S D s at birth microcephaly small brain size is inferred Primary microcephaly is the term used to describe genetic microcephalies that can be seen in pregnancy The majority of them known as microcephalic dwarfism are autosomal recessive and include I solitary variants known as Microcephaly Primary Hereditary MCPH and ii types linked to growth retardation A MCPH phenotype is linked to the majority of STIL mutations found in patients and STIL is known as MCPH7 Both an increase and a decrease in STIL protein levels during the cell cycle have an impact on centriole control and cause microcephaly References edit a b c GRCh38 Ensembl release 89 ENSG00000123473 Ensembl May 2017 a b c GRCm38 Ensembl release 89 ENSMUSG00000028718 Ensembl May 2017 Human PubMed Reference National Center for Biotechnology Information U S National Library of Medicine Mouse PubMed Reference National Center for Biotechnology Information U S National Library of Medicine Patwardhan Dhruti Mani Shyamala Passemard Sandrine Gressens Pierre El Ghouzzi Vincent 2018 01 19 STIL balancing primary microcephaly and cancer Cell Death amp Disease 9 2 65 doi 10 1038 s41419 017 0101 9 ISSN 2041 4889 PMC 5833631 PMID 29352115 a b Li Lei Liu Congcong Carr Aprell L 2019 04 25 STIL a multi function protein required for dopaminergic neural proliferation protection and regeneration Cell Death Discovery 5 1 90 doi 10 1038 s41420 019 0172 8 ISSN 2058 7716 PMC 6484007 PMID 31044090 Kasai Kenji Inaguma Shingo Yoneyama Akiko Yoshikawa Kazuhiro Ikeda Hiroshi 2008 10 01 SCL TAL1 Interrupting Locus Derepresses GLI1 from the Negative Control of Suppressor of Fused in Pancreatic Cancer Cell Cancer Research 68 19 7723 7729 doi 10 1158 0008 5472 CAN 07 6661 ISSN 0008 5472 PMID 18829525 Further reading editAplan PD Lombardi DP Reaman GH et al 1992 Involvement of the putative hematopoietic transcription factor SCL in T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia Blood 79 5 1327 33 doi 10 1182 blood V79 5 1327 1327 PMID 1311214 Aplan PD Lombardi DP Kirsch IR 1991 Structural characterization of SIL a gene frequently disrupted in T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia Mol Cell Biol 11 11 5462 9 doi 10 1128 MCB 11 11 5462 PMC 361915 PMID 1922059 Jonsson OG Kitchens RL Baer RJ et al 1991 Rearrangements of the tal 1 locus as clonal markers for T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia J Clin Invest 87 6 2029 35 doi 10 1172 JCI115232 PMC 296958 PMID 2040693 Aplan PD Lombardi DP Ginsberg AM et al 1991 Disruption of the human SCL locus by illegitimate V D J recombinase activity Science 250 4986 1426 9 doi 10 1126 science 2255914 PMID 2255914 Kikuchi A Hayashi Y Kobayashi S et al 1993 Clinical significance of TAL1 gene alteration in childhood T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia and lymphoma Leukemia 7 7 933 8 PMID 8321044 Collazo Garcia N Scherer P Aplan PD 1997 Cloning and characterization of a murine SIL gene Genomics 30 3 506 13 doi 10 1006 geno 1995 1271 PMID 8825637 Izraeli S Colaizzo Anas T Bertness VL et al 1997 Expression of the SIL gene is correlated with growth induction and cellular proliferation Cell Growth Differ 8 11 1171 9 PMID 9372240 Gottgens B Barton LM Gilbert JG et al 2000 Analysis of vertebrate SCL loci identifies conserved enhancers Nat Biotechnol 18 2 181 6 doi 10 1038 72635 PMID 10657125 S2CID 27473560 Raghavan SC Kirsch IR Lieber MR 2001 Analysis of the V D J recombination efficiency at lymphoid chromosomal translocation breakpoints J Biol Chem 276 31 29126 33 doi 10 1074 jbc M103797200 PMID 11390401 Carlotti E Pettenella F Amaru R et al 2002 Molecular characterization of a new recombination of the SIL TAL 1 locus in a child with T cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia Br J Haematol 118 4 1011 8 doi 10 1046 j 1365 2141 2002 03747 x PMID 12199779 S2CID 20462278 Karkera JD Izraeli S Roessler E et al 2003 The genomic structure chromosomal localization and analysis of SIL as a candidate gene for holoprosencephaly Cytogenet Genome Res 97 1 2 62 7 doi 10 1159 000064057 PMID 12438740 S2CID 33129304 Strausberg RL Feingold EA Grouse LH et al 2003 Generation and initial analysis of more than 15 000 full length human and mouse cDNA sequences Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 99 26 16899 903 Bibcode 2002PNAS 9916899M doi 10 1073 pnas 242603899 PMC 139241 PMID 12477932 Colaizzo Anas T Aplan PD 2003 Cloning and characterization of the SIL promoter Biochim Biophys Acta 1625 2 207 13 doi 10 1016 S0167 4781 02 00597 3 PMID 12531481 Curry JD Smith MT 2003 Measurement of SIL TAL1 fusion gene transcripts associated with human T cell lymphocytic leukemia by real time reverse transcriptase PCR Leuk Res 27 7 575 82 doi 10 1016 S0145 2126 02 00260 6 PMID 12681356 Cave H Suciu S Preudhomme C et al 2004 Clinical significance of HOX11L2 expression linked to t 5 14 q35 q32 of HOX11 expression and of SIL TAL fusion in childhood T cell malignancies results of EORTC studies 58881 and 58951 Blood 103 2 442 50 doi 10 1182 blood 2003 05 1495 PMID 14504110 Erez A Perelman M Hewitt SM et al 2004 Sil overexpression in lung cancer characterizes tumors with increased mitotic activity Oncogene 23 31 5371 7 doi 10 1038 sj onc 1207685 PMID 15107824 Gerhard DS Wagner L Feingold EA et al 2004 The Status Quality and Expansion of the NIH Full Length cDNA Project The Mammalian Gene Collection MGC Genome Res 14 10B 2121 7 doi 10 1101 gr 2596504 PMC 528928 PMID 15489334 Campaner S Kaldis P Izraeli S Kirsch IR 2005 Sil Phosphorylation in a Pin1 Binding Domain Affects the Duration of the Spindle Checkpoint Mol Cell Biol 25 15 6660 72 doi 10 1128 MCB 25 15 6660 6672 2005 PMC 1190358 PMID 16024801 Kimura K Wakamatsu A Suzuki Y et al 2006 Diversification of transcriptional modulation Large scale identification and characterization of putative alternative promoters of human genes Genome Res 16 1 55 65 doi 10 1101 gr 4039406 PMC 1356129 PMID 16344560 Kumar A Girimaji SC Duvvari MR Blanton SH 2009 Mutations in STIL encoding a pericentriolar and centrosomal protein cause primary microcephaly American Journal of Human Genetics 84 286 290 External links editOverview of all the structural information available in the PDB for UniProt Q15468 SCL interrupting locus protein at the PDBe KB Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title STIL amp oldid 1138799304, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.