Litcius/Paper detail

NUCKS1 is a highly modified, chromatin-associated protein involved in a diverse set of biological and pathophysiological processes

Anne Carine Østvold, Kirsten Grundt, Claudia Wiese

2022Biochemical Journal36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The Nuclear Casein and Cyclin-dependent Kinase Substrate 1 (NUCKS1) protein is highly conserved in vertebrates, predominantly localized to the nucleus and one of the most heavily modified proteins in the human proteome. NUCKS1 expression is high in stem cells and the brain, developmentally regulated in mice and associated with several diverse malignancies in humans, including cancer, metabolic syndrome and Parkinson's disease. NUCKS1 function has been linked to modulating chromatin architecture and transcription, DNA repair and cell cycle regulation. In this review, we summarize and discuss the published information on NUCKS1 and highlight the questions that remain to be addressed to better understand the complex biology of this multifaceted protein.

Topics & Concepts

ChromatinBiologyProteomeNuclear proteinCell biologyTranscription factorComputational biologyCell nucleusGeneticsDNANucleusGeneGenomics and Chromatin DynamicsNuclear Structure and FunctionRNA Research and Splicing