High-mobility group
High-Mobility Group or HMG is a group of chromosomal proteins that are involved in the regulation of DNA-dependent processes such as
transcription, replication, recombination, and DNA repair.
History and name
HMG proteins were originally isolated from mammalian cells, and named according to their electrophoretic mobility in polyacrylamide gels.Families
The HMG proteins are subdivided into 3 superfamilies each containing a characteristic functional domain:- HMGA – contains an AT-hook domain
- * HMGA1
- * HMGA2
- HMGB – contains a HMG-box domain
- * HMGB1
- * HMGB2
- * HMGB3
- * HMGB4
- HMGN – contains a nucleosomal binding domain
- * HMGN1
- * HMGN2
- * HMGN3
- * HMGN4
- * HMGN5
HMG-box proteins are found in a variety of eukaryotic organisms.
Other families with HMG-box domain
- SOX gene family
- * Sex-Determining Region Y Protein
- * SOX1, SOX2, etc.
- TCF/LEF family
- * LEF1
- * TCF7
- * TCF7L1
- * TCF7L2
Function
In mammalian cells, the HMG non-histone proteins can modulate the activity of major DNA repair pathways including base excision repair, mismatch repair, nucleotide excision repair and double-strand break repair.