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Chromosomal localization of three vacuolar-H+ -ATPase 16 kDa subunit (ATP6V0C) genes in the murine genome.

Vacuolar-H(+)-ATPase (V-H-ATPase) is a large multimeric protein composed of at least 12 distinct subunits. The 16-kDa hydrophobic proteolipid subunit (ATP6V0C; ATPase, H(+ )transporting, lysosomal 16 kDa, V0 subunit C) plays a central role in H(+) transport across cellular membranes. We have mapped three ATP6V0C genes (Atp6v0c, Atp6v0c-ps1 and Atp6voc-ps2) in the murine genome. Atp6v0c-ps1 and Atp6v0c-ps2 map to Chromosomes 7 and 6, respectively. Atp6v0c maps to Chromosome 17, closely linked to the Tsc2 locus and D17Mit55. This region of Chromosome 17 in mouse is homologous with chromosome 16 in human where the ATP6V0C gene is localized.[1]

References

  1. Chromosomal localization of three vacuolar-H+ -ATPase 16 kDa subunit (ATP6V0C) genes in the murine genome. Simckes, A.M., Swanson, S.K., White, R.A. Cytogenet. Genome Res. (2002) [Pubmed]
 
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