Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

SWAP protein domain

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Symbol
  
Surp

InterPro
  
IPR000061

PDB
  
RCSB PDB; PDBe; PDBj

Pfam
  
PF01805

Pfam
  
structures

PDBsum
  
structure summary

SWAP protein domain

In molecular biology, the protein domain SWAP is derived from the term Suppressor-of-White-APricot, a splicing regulator from the model organism Drosophila melanogaster. The protein domain is found in regulators that control splicing. It is found in splicing regulatory proteins. When a gene is expressed the DNA must be transcribed into messenger RNA (mRNA). However, it sometimes contains intervening or interrupting sequences named introns. mRNA splicing helps to remove these sequences, leaving a more favourable sequence. mRNA splicing is an essential event in the post-transcriptional modification process of gene expression. SWAP helps to control this process in all cells except gametes.

Contents

Function

The role of the protein domain SWAP is to control sex-independent pre-mRNA processing in somatic cells, that is, in every cell except the sex cells This includes autoregulation, whereby it regulates the splicing of its own pre-mRNA. The mammalian homologue of SWAP acts as a thyroid hormone regulated gene. This mean it is controlled by the thyroid.

Structure

SWAP proteins share a colinearly arrayed series of novel sequence motifs. This means that they have been conserved over time. The SWAP protein in different organisms share some similarity in terms of sequence and may have been related at some point in evolutionary history.

References

SWAP protein domain Wikipedia