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ENDOG Protein (Endonuclease G)

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protein693 wordssynced 2026-04-02

ENDOG Protein (Endonuclease G)

Overview

Endonuclease G (ENDOG) is a mitochondrial nuclease enzyme encoded by the ENDOG gene located on chromosome 14q11.2. This protein belongs to the family of non-specific DNA endonucleases and functions as a critical mediator of cell death pathways, particularly in the context of mitochondrial dysfunction. ENDOG is a 32 kDa protein with a zinc finger motif essential for its catalytic activity and DNA-binding capacity. Unlike many apoptotic proteins, ENDOG is constitutively expressed in most tissues at relatively stable levels, but its pathological significance becomes apparent during stress conditions when mitochondrial integrity is compromised. The protein exists primarily in the mitochondrial intermembrane space under normal physiological conditions, where it remains sequestered from genomic DNA.

Function/Biology

ENDOG operates as a mitochondrial endonuclease with multiple biological functions depending on cellular context. Under normal conditions, the protein maintains a housekeeping role in mitochondrial DNA homeostasis, participating in the degradation of damaged or oxidatively modified mitochondrial DNA. This function helps preserve mitochondrial genome integrity and prevents the accumulation of mutagenic lesions. ENDOG possesses non-specific endonucleolytic activity, capable of cleaving double-stranded DNA in a magnesium-dependent manner, generating characteristic internucleosomal fragments of approximately 50-300 kilobases.

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