Tex36


Testis expressed 36, TEX36, is a protein that in humans is encoded by the tex36 gene. TEX36 interacts with proteins involved in the MAP kinase family, supporting that TEX36 may be regulated with on or off configurations. The encoded protein is highly expressed in fetal, testes, and placental tissues and has background expression levels in adults. There are also many motifs specific to male sex determination and spermatogenic factors, suggesting that it is involved in development.

Gene

The verified gene sequence was confirmed in NCBI on November 26, 2016. The coding region spans 106,622 bases, and within that region are 4 exons.

Aliases

TEX36, is also known by the aliases C10orf122 and BA383C5.1. It has cytogenetic bands at 10q26.13. TEX36 is also a member of the Human CCDS set CCDS44493.1.

Locus

The gene spans from 125576522 to 125683144 in the human genome. Figured is the genomic context of TEX36. There is aldolase, fructose-biphosphate A2 along with several uncharacterized loci in the gene neighborhood of TEX36.

mRNA

There are two variants of TEX36, transcripts 1 and 2. The two differ by an alternately spliced 4th exon. Validated variants, 1 and 2, both contain 4 exons, but variant 1 has a longer transcript with 922 base pairs, whereas variant 2 contains 777 base pairs with a different terminating region. Only variant 1 is the protein encoding transcript.

Protein

Variant 1 encodes protein testis expressed 36. TEX36 does not have any confirmed isoforms. The unmodified TEX36 consists of 186 amino acids and has a molecular weight of 21,545 daltons, with an isoelectric point of 9.1. Amino acids serine and lysine are highly represented in the protein at a higher frequency than observed in most proteins in vertebrates.

Domains & Motifs

DomainLocationNotes
VVSS136-139Repeat
HDNR73-76Domain of unknown function, found in 6 human proteins
Pat4167, 168Nuclear localization signal
MapK13-18MapK interacting docking motif, overlaps with beta strand

Secondary Structure

Based on conservation through multiple sequence alignments and multiple secondary structure prediction algorithms, TEX36 is composed of 4 alpha helices and 5 beta strands.
12345
Alpha Helix47-4857-62148-153161-167
Beta Strand16-2131-3370-72128-140171-184

Post-Translational Modifications

14 of the 20 serine residues in TEX36 appear to be post-translationally phosphorylated. There are protein kinase C and casein kinase phosphorylation domains, along with a cAMP phosphodiesterase site and amidation sites. These post translational modifications, specifically phosphorylation, may regulate TEX36 to be off when phosphorylated and in an on conformation when not.

Sub-cellular Localization

There are a couple of nuclear localization signals, pat4, and strong support from other analyses that TEX36 may be localized to the nucleus. There is not strong support for it to be found in the ER, cytoplasm, or vacuoles. These findings were consistent for the human TEX36 along with distant orthologs, such as the sea anemone and canary.

Expression and Regulation

Regulation of Gene Expression

The promoter region contains the following regulatory sequences that are in highly conserved regions of TEX36:
SequenceNumber
Spermatogenic Zip13
Nanog1
Sex determining region Y1
SRY Box 92
SRY-related HMG-box 301

Regulation of Translation

In the 5'UTR, there is one stable stem loop, which contains a eukaryotic translation initiation factor motif. There was also a splice factor in the 5'UTR. In both the 5'UTR and 3'UTR are X-linked RNA binding motifs. One of the three stable stem loops in the 3'UTR contained an X-linked RNA binding motif. There were no identified miRNA targets in either untranslated regions.

Tissue Expression

Based on microarray data, TEX36 is highly expressed in placental, fetal, and testis tissues. Whereas remains are more background levels in other adult tissues. Also, TEX36 has shown to have a two-fold increase in expression levels after exercise, compared to before in endothelial progenitor cells.

Function

Interacting Proteins

TEX36 has been shown to interact with:

Variants, Pathology and Clinical Significance

TEX36 is one of 77 proteins expressed by testes capable of interacting with protein phosphatase 1, PP1, human testis protein protein phosphatase 1. One variant of TEX36, p.R142H, was found across all patients in a study on intracranial aneurysms. However, there was no further research on the gene and its protein function. TEX36 has also been found to be a commonly down-regulated gene in patients with microalbuminuria compared to those with normoalbuminuria. Because of the variant associated with intracranial aneurysms and its downregulation associated with various albumin levels, protein changes in TEX36 either in variants or expression levels could be deleterious, but there is no confirmation on these assumptions.

Homology

Paralogs

There are no known paralogs of TEX36.

Ortholog Space

Identified through BLAST and BLAT, species that have contain an ortholog of TEX36, include: mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish, echinoids, anthozoans, and molluscs. There are no confirmed orthologs in bacteria, fungi/metazoans, plants, or archaea. TEX36 is found often in mammals, fish and birds, and more sparse in the others.
Specific NameCommon NameOrderAccession NumberDivergence Time Length IdentitySimilarity
Homo sapiensHumanPrimatesNP_001121674.10186100100
Panthera tigris altaicaSiberian TigerCarnivoraXP_007079755.19618271.880.9
Tursiops truncatusBottlenose DolphinArtiodactylaXP_019795781.19616365.171.5
Dasypus novemcinctusArmadilloCingulataXP_004446737.110518176.982.8
Buceros rhinoceros silvestrisRhinoceros hornbillBucerotiformesXP_010142644.131218742.657.9
Chrysemys picta belliiPainted TurtleTestudinesXP_005281969.131216438.754.8
Xenopus laevisAfrican Clawed FrogAnuraXP_018082893.135216331.142.5
Latimeria chalumnaeOcean CoelacanthCoelacanthiformesXP_014343024.141318333.849.3
Strongylocentrotus purpuratusPurple Sea UrchinEchinoidaXP_001184205.268420028.628.8
Crassostrea gigasPacific OysterOstreoidaXP_011437377.179723823.533.7
Exaiptasia pallidaSea AnemoneActiniariaKXJ14560.18241822332

Protein Evolution

Compared to a fast evolving protein, fibrinogen factor A, and a slow evolving protein, cytochrome c1, TEX36 has a similar rate of evolution to fibrinogen factor A, suggesting it is a fast evolving protein.