GJB2

Gap junction protein, beta 2, 26kDa

Rendering based on PDB 1XIR.
Identifiers
Symbols GJB2; CX26; DFNA3; DFNA3A; DFNB1; DFNB1A; HID; KID; NSRD1; PPK
External IDs OMIM121011 MGI95720 HomoloGene2975 GeneCards: GJB2 Gene
Orthologs
Species Human Mouse
Entrez 2706 14619
Ensembl ENSG00000165474 ENSMUSG00000046352
UniProt P29033 Q3TZE5
RefSeq (mRNA) NM_004004.5 NM_008125.3
RefSeq (protein) NP_003995.2 NP_032151.1
Location (UCSC) Chr 13:
20.76 – 20.77 Mb
Chr 14:
57.72 – 57.72 Mb
PubMed search [1] [2]

Gap junction beta-2 (GJB2) also known as connexin-26 (Cx26) is a protein that in humans is encoded by the GJB2 gene. Defects in this gene lead to the most common form of congenital deafness in developed countries, called DFNB1, also known as Connexin 26 deafness or GJB2-related deafness.

Contents

Function

Gap junctions were first characterized by electron microscopy as regionally specialized structures on plasma membranes of contacting adherent cells. These structures were shown to consist of cell-to-cell channels. Proteins, called connexins, purified from fractions of enriched gap junctions from different tissues differ. The connexins are designated by their molecular mass. Another system of nomenclature divides gap junction proteins into 2 categories, alpha and beta, according to sequence similarities at the nucleotide and amino acid levels. For example, CX43 (MIM 121014) is designated alpha-1 gap junction protein, whereas CX32 (GJB1; MIM 304040) and CX26 (this protein) are called beta-1 and beta-2 gap junction proteins, respectively. This nomenclature emphasizes that CX32 and CX26 are more homologous to each other than either of them is to CX43.[1]

See also

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