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RARB
RARB
<div class="infobox infobox-gene">
<div class="infobox-header">RARB</div>
<div class="infobox-content">
<div class="infobox-row"><strong>Full Name:</strong> Retinoic Acid Receptor Beta</div>
<div class="infobox-row"><strong>Symbol:</strong> RARB</div>
<div class="infobox-row"><strong>Chromosomal Location:</strong> 3p24.2</div>
<div class="infobox-row"><strong>NCBI Gene ID:</strong> 5916</div>
<div class="infobox-row"><strong>Ensembl ID:</strong> ENSG00000177030</div>
<div class="infobox-row"><strong>UniProt ID:</strong> P10828</div>
<div class="infobox-row"><strong>Protein Class:</strong> Nuclear receptor, ligand-activated transcription factor</div>
<div class="infobox-row"><strong>Associated Diseases:</strong> Alzheimer's Disease, Parkinson's Disease, Autism, Schizophrenia, Neurodevelopmental Disorders</div>
</div>
</div>
Overview
...
RARB
<div class="infobox infobox-gene">
<div class="infobox-header">RARB</div>
<div class="infobox-content">
<div class="infobox-row"><strong>Full Name:</strong> Retinoic Acid Receptor Beta</div>
<div class="infobox-row"><strong>Symbol:</strong> RARB</div>
<div class="infobox-row"><strong>Chromosomal Location:</strong> 3p24.2</div>
<div class="infobox-row"><strong>NCBI Gene ID:</strong> 5916</div>
<div class="infobox-row"><strong>Ensembl ID:</strong> ENSG00000177030</div>
<div class="infobox-row"><strong>UniProt ID:</strong> P10828</div>
<div class="infobox-row"><strong>Protein Class:</strong> Nuclear receptor, ligand-activated transcription factor</div>
<div class="infobox-row"><strong>Associated Diseases:</strong> Alzheimer's Disease, Parkinson's Disease, Autism, Schizophrenia, Neurodevelopmental Disorders</div>
</div>
</div>
Overview
RARB (Retinoic Acid Receptor Beta) encodes a nuclear receptor that functions as a ligand-activated transcription factor for retinoic acid (RA), the active metabolite of vitamin A. Located on chromosome 3p24.2 with NCBI Gene ID 5916, RARB is expressed in numerous tissues including brain, lung, skin, and developing embryonic tissues. The receptor plays critical roles in embryonic development, cell differentiation, tissue homeostasis, and importantly, in neuronal function including synaptic plasticity, memory formation, and neuroprotection.
Recent research has revealed significant RARB dysfunction in [Alzheimer's disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease) and [Parkinson's disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease), where reduced RARB expression correlates with disease severity. RARB acts as a heterodimer with [RXRA](/genes/rxra) to bind retinoic acid response elements (RAREs) in target gene promoters, regulating genes involved in neuronal survival, inflammation, and amyloid metabolism.
Gene and Protein Structure
Gene Organization
The RARB gene spans approximately 200 kb on chromosome 3p24.2 and contains at least 10 exons. Multiple transcript variants are generated through alternative promoter usage and splicing, producing at least 6 isoforms with distinct N-terminal domains and expression patterns. The gene is located at positions 25,410,000-25,620,000 on GRCh38.
Protein Topology
The RARB protein (approximately 465 amino acids) contains characteristic nuclear receptor domains:
- N-terminal activation domain (AF-1): Contains ligand-independent transcriptional activation function
- DNA-binding domain (DBD): Two zinc finger motifs that recognize RAREs in target gene promoters
- Hinge region: Flexible domain connecting DBD to LBD, contains nuclear localization signals
- Ligand-binding domain (LBD): Binds retinoic acid; contains ligand-dependent activation function (AF-2)
- C-terminal domain: Involved in dimerization and coactivator recruitment
Signaling Mechanisms
RARB activation triggers:
Expression Pattern
Tissue Distribution
RARB exhibits tissue-specific expression:
- High expression: Brain (cortex, hippocampus, basal ganglia, cerebellum), lung, skin, testis
- Moderate expression: Heart, kidney, pancreas, spleen
- Low expression: Liver, muscle
Brain Expression
Within the CNS, RARB is expressed in:
- Neurons: Particularly in cortex layer V, hippocampal CA1-CA3, striatal medium spiny neurons
- Astrocytes: Moderate expression, upregulated in reactive astrocytes
- Microglia: Low baseline expression, modulated by neuroinflammation
- Oligodendrocytes: During development and myelination
Developmental Expression
RARB shows dynamic expression during development:
- High expression during embryonic CNS development
- Expression decreases in most brain regions postnatally
- Maintained expression in specific regions (hippocampus, olfactory bulb)
- Re-expression in some pathological conditions
Physiological Functions
Neuronal Differentiation
RARB is essential for neuronal differentiation during development:
- Promotes neuronal lineage commitment
- Regulates expression of neuronal markers (NeuroD1, MAP2, NeuN)
- Controls axonal guidance and dendritic arborization
- Essential for proper brain patterning
Synaptic Plasticity
In the mature nervous system, RARB critically regulates synaptic plasticity:
- Long-term potentiation (LTP): RARB activation enhances LTP in hippocampal neurons
- Learning and memory: RARB knockout mice show impaired spatial learning
- Synaptic protein expression: Regulates PSD-95, Synapsin, and NMDA/AMPA receptor subunits
Neuroprotection
RARB signaling provides neuroprotection through multiple mechanisms:
- Anti-apoptotic signaling via Bcl-2 upregulation
- Antioxidant gene expression
- Anti-inflammatory effects in glia
- Support of mitochondrial function
Role in Neurodegenerative Diseases
Alzheimer's Disease
RARB dysfunction significantly contributes to [Alzheimer's disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease) pathogenesis:
Expression changes: RARB expression is reduced in AD brain:
- 40-60% reduction in hippocampus
- 30-50% reduction in cortex
- Correlation with disease severity (Braak stage)
- Impaired retinoic acid signaling reduces neuroprotective gene expression
- Decreased amyloid clearance through altered microglial function
- Synaptic plasticity deficits through NMDA receptor dysregulation
- Exacerbated neuroinflammation through microglial activation
- Reduce amyloid burden in APP/PS1 mice
- Improve cognitive function in AD models
- Protect against excitotoxicity
- Modulate neuroinflammation
Parkinson's Disease
In [Parkinson's disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease), RARB plays protective roles:
Dopaminergic neuron vulnerability: Reduced RA signaling in substantia nigra:
- Decreased RARB expression in PD substantia nigra
- Impaired neuroprotection of dopaminergic neurons
- Increased vulnerability to oxidative stress
- RA treatment reduces alpha-synuclein aggregation
- RARB activation promotes lysosomal degradation
- Protects against alpha-synuclein toxicity
- Protect dopaminergic neurons
- Reduce alpha-synuclein pathology
- Improve mitochondrial function
Neurodevelopmental Disorders
RARB mutations are associated with neurodevelopmental disorders:
Autism spectrum disorder: RARB haploinsufficiency:
- Identified in patients with ASD
- Contributes to social and communication deficits
- Mouse models show repetitive behaviors
- Reduced intellectual functioning
- Speech and language delays
- Behavioral problems
- Genetic association studies implicate RARB
- Altered RA signaling in patient brains
- May affect dopaminergic system development
Therapeutic Implications
RARB Agonists
Synthetic retinoids targeting RARB are in development:
For Alzheimer's disease:
- Target: Enhance neuroprotection, reduce amyloid
- Examples: AC-261066, compounds in Phase I trials
- Challenges: Brain penetration, toxicity concerns
- Target: Protect dopaminergic neurons
- Approach: Focus on substantiaNigra-targeting compounds
Retinoic Acid Delivery
Alternative approaches include:
- All-trans-retinoic acid (ATRA): Already approved for leukemia
- 9-cis-retinoic acid: Endogenous ligand
- Novel derivatives: Reduced toxicity, enhanced brain delivery
Gene Therapy
Viral vector delivery of RARB is being explored:
- AAV-mediated RARB expression
- Targeted to neurons and glia
- Long-term expression potential
Key Publications
See Also
- [Retinoic Acid Signaling](/mechanisms/retinoic-acid-signaling)
- [Nuclear Receptor Signaling](/mechanisms/nuclear-receptor-pathway)
- [Alzheimer's Disease Mechanisms](/diseases/alzheimers-disease)
- [Parkinson's Disease Mechanisms](/diseases/parkinsons-disease)
- [RXRA](/genes/rxra)
- [Synaptic Plasticity](/mechanisms/synaptic-plasticity)
- [Neuroinflammation](/mechanisms/neuroinflammation-pathway)
External Links
- [NCBI Gene: RARB](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/5916)
- [UniProt: RARB](https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/P10828)
- [HGNC: RARB](https://www.genenames.org/data/hgnc_data.php?hgnc_id=9965)
- [OMIM: RARB](https://www.omim.org/entry/180260)
- [Allen Brain Atlas: RARB expression](https://human.brain-map.org/)
- [PubMed: RARB neurodegeneration](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/?term=RARB+Alzheimer+Parkinson)
References
Pathway Diagram
The following diagram shows the key molecular relationships involving RARB discovered through SciDEX knowledge graph analysis:
▸Metadataorigin_type: v1_polymorphic_backfill
| slug | genes-rarb |
| kg_node_id | RARB |
| entity_type | gene |
| origin_type | v1_polymorphic_backfill |
| source_table | wiki_pages |
| wiki_page_id | wp-e0ccdb00c94c |
| __merged_from | {'merged_at': '2026-05-13', 'unprefixed_id': 'genes-rarb'} |
| _schema_version | 1 |
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