USP11

Ubiquitin specific peptidase 11
Available structures
PDB Ortholog search: PDBe, RCSB
Identifiers
SymbolsUSP11 ; UHX1
External IDsOMIM: 300050 MGI: 2384312 HomoloGene: 31252 GeneCards: USP11 Gene
EC number3.4.19.12
Orthologs
SpeciesHumanMouse
Entrez8237236733
EnsemblENSG00000102226ENSMUSG00000031066
UniProtP51784Q99K46
RefSeq (mRNA)NM_004651NM_145628
RefSeq (protein)NP_004642NP_663603
Location (UCSC)Chr X:
47.23 – 47.25 Mb
Chr X:
20.7 – 20.72 Mb
PubMed search

Ubiquitin carboxyl-terminal hydrolase 11 is an enzyme that in humans is encoded by the USP11 gene.[1][2]

Function

Protein ubiquitination controls many intracellular processes, including cell cycle progression, transcriptional activation, and signal transduction. This dynamic process, involving ubiquitin conjugating enzymes and deubiquitinating enzymes, adds and removes ubiquitin. Deubiquitinating enzymes are cysteine proteases that specifically cleave ubiquitin from ubiquitin-conjugated protein substrates. This gene encodes a deubiquitinating enzyme which lies in a gene cluster on chromosome Xp11.23[2]

Interactions

USP11 has been shown to interact with RANBP9.[3]

References

  1. Puente XS, Sánchez LM, Overall CM, López-Otín C (Jul 2003). "Human and mouse proteases: a comparative genomic approach". Nat Rev Genet 4 (7): 544–58. doi:10.1038/nrg1111. PMID 12838346. Vancouver style error (help)
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Entrez Gene: USP11 ubiquitin specific peptidase 11".
  3. Ideguchi H, Ueda A, Tanaka M, Yang J, Tsuji T, Ohno S et al. (Oct 2002). "Structural and functional characterization of the USP11 deubiquitinating enzyme, which interacts with the RanGTP-associated protein RanBPM". Biochem. J. 367 (Pt 1): 87–95. doi:10.1042/BJ20011851. PMC 1222860. PMID 12084015.

Further reading