Gene content    
BTG2 ( by HUGO)
BTG Family, Member
Tumor suppressor gene
BTG Family
Member 2
NGF-Inducible Anti-Proliferative Protein PC3
PC3
B-Cell Translocation Gene 2
Nerve Growth Factor-Inducible Anti-Proliferative
Pheochromacytoma Cell-3
TIS21
Protein BTG2
BTG Family Member 2
NCBI: 1q32    Ensembl: 1q32.1
BTG2_HUMANSize: 158 amino acidsMass: 17416 Da

  • Subunit: Interacts with PRKCABP (By similarity). Interacts with CNOT7 and CNOT8; indicative for an asscociation with the CCR4-NOT complex. Interacts with PIN1, inducing mitochondrial depolarization 2 PDB 3D structures from [IMAGE] and Proteopedia [IMAGE] for BTG2: 3DJU (3D) [IMAGE] 3E9V (3D) [IMAGE]
  • Function:
    UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot Summary: BTG2_HUMAN, P78543 Function: Anti-proliferative protein; the function is mediated by association with deadenylase subunits of the CCR4-NOT complex. Activates mRNA deadenyltion in a CNOT6 and CNOT7-dependent manner. In vitro can inhibit deadenylase activity of CNOT7 and CNOT8. Involved in cell cycle regulation. Could be involved in the growth arrest and differentiation of the neuronal precursors (By similarity). Modulates transcription regulation mediated by ESR1. Involved in mitochondrial depolarization and neurite outgrowth
  • Similarity:
    Belongs to the BTG family [IMAGE]
  • Protein Domain/Family    
    Source ID Domain Name Type
    InterProIPR002087Anti_prolifrtnAnti-proliferative proteinFamily
    BlocksIPB002087Anti-proliferative proteinAnti-proliferative protein

    Gene Ontology    
    Type Term Evidence Source Pub
    Biological Process cellular response to DNA damage stimulus IDA GOA 8944033
    DNA repair TAS GOA 8944033
    neuron projection development IMP GOA 18773938
    positive regulation of nuclear-transcribed mRNA poly(A) tail shortening IDA GOA 18337750
    Cellular Component extracellular vesicular exosome IDA GOA 19056867
    Molecular Function protein binding IPI GOA 11136725

    BTG2 cross reference    
    PubMed OMIM Entrez Gene NCKU SNP Nucleotide UniProt Genome Data Viewer HomoloGene