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Atrophin-1 Protein

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entity950 wordssynced 2026-04-02

Atrophin-1 Protein

Overview

Atrophin-1 is a large cytoplasmic protein encoded by the ATN1 gene that functions as a transcriptional corepressor and plays critical roles in neuronal development, synaptic plasticity, and cellular stress responses. The protein is best characterized by its pathological expansion of a polyglutamine tract, which causes dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy (DRPLA), a progressive neurodegenerative disorder. Atrophin-1 serves as a key model for understanding polyglutamine diseases and represents an important intersection between normal neurobiological function and pathogenic protein aggregation.

Gene and Protein Structure

The ATN1 gene, located on chromosome 12q23.3, encodes a protein of approximately 1,185 amino acids with a molecular weight of ~140 kDa. The protein contains several functionally important domains, including an N-terminal region with predicted protein-protein interaction motifs, a central polyglutamine repeat tract (typically 6-35 glutamine residues in normal individuals), and a C-terminal region rich in acidic amino acids. The polyglutamine expansion that characterizes DRPLA involves repeat lengths exceeding 49 residues, with disease severity generally correlating with expansion size and age of onset showing inverse correlation with repeat length (PMID:8521494).

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