Difference between revisions of "Phosphatase Family OCA"

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The OCA family is named after the five member genes in yeast (OCA1-5 = Oxidant-induced Cell-cycle Arrest). Yeast OCA members are involved in cell cycle arrest in response to oxidative damage<cite>Alic</cite>, in telomere capping <cite>lydall08</cite>, in actin organization <cite>Care</cite>. [[Gene_OCA3|OCA3]] has been shown to control intracellular localization of Gln3 (a phosphorylated transcriptional activator), in cooperation with Npr1 kinase <cite>Harashima08</cite>.
 
The OCA family is named after the five member genes in yeast (OCA1-5 = Oxidant-induced Cell-cycle Arrest). Yeast OCA members are involved in cell cycle arrest in response to oxidative damage<cite>Alic</cite>, in telomere capping <cite>lydall08</cite>, in actin organization <cite>Care</cite>. [[Gene_OCA3|OCA3]] has been shown to control intracellular localization of Gln3 (a phosphorylated transcriptional activator), in cooperation with Npr1 kinase <cite>Harashima08</cite>.
  
It is found in most eukaryotes other than eumetazoa. We have seen it in fungi, plants, protists, monosiga, and sponge.
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OCA is found in most eukaryotes other than eumetazoa. We have seen it in fungi, plants, protists, monosiga, and sponge.
  
 
The family is also called '''plant and fungi atypical (PFA)-DSPs''' <cite>Pulido07 Pulido11</cite>.
 
The family is also called '''plant and fungi atypical (PFA)-DSPs''' <cite>Pulido07 Pulido11</cite>.

Revision as of 21:02, 6 December 2014

Phosphatase Classification: Superfamily CC1: OCA

The OCA family is named after the five member genes in yeast (OCA1-5 = Oxidant-induced Cell-cycle Arrest). Yeast OCA members are involved in cell cycle arrest in response to oxidative damage[1], in telomere capping [2], in actin organization [3]. OCA3 has been shown to control intracellular localization of Gln3 (a phosphorylated transcriptional activator), in cooperation with Npr1 kinase [4].

OCA is found in most eukaryotes other than eumetazoa. We have seen it in fungi, plants, protists, monosiga, and sponge.

The family is also called plant and fungi atypical (PFA)-DSPs [5, 6].


Reference
Error fetching PMID 11408586:
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  1. Error fetching PMID 11408586: [Alic]
  2. Error fetching PMID 18845848: [lydall08]
  3. Error fetching PMID 15020461: [Care]
  4. Error fetching PMID 18166280: [Harashima08]
  5. Error fetching PMID 17976645: [Pulido07]
  6. Error fetching PMID 21409566: [Pulido11]
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