Neuroblastoma breakpoint family member 19, or NBPF19, is a protein that in humans is encoded by the NBPF19 gene.[3] This protein is included in the neuroblastoma breakpoint family of proteins.[4]
The NBPF19 gene is a protein-encoding gene in humans. It is composed of 80,464 bases including all introns and exons. It is located on the positive strand of chromosome 1 at locus 1q21.2.[5]
EST profile data of NBPF19 showing tissue and health state expression data.[6]
Expression[]
EST profiling of NBPF19 shows it to be ubiquitously expressed in most human tissues at unremarkable amounts. It is expressed in relatively higher amounts in the skin, lymphoid organs (lymph nodes, spleen) and the gonads (ovary, testes).[5]
Transcript[]
The mRNA transcript of NBPF19 in humans is 13,190 bases long.[7] There are 2 predicted alternative splicing isoforms, although none have been experimentally observed.[8]
Protein[]
The protein product of the NBPF19 transcript is composed of 3,843 amino acids and weights 440.5 kD.[8][9] It contains 45 DUF1220 domains of unknown function but that have been linked to evolutionary changes and generally decrease in number in species increasingly evolutionarily distant from humans.[10]
Repetitive phosphorylation pattern of the NBPF19 protein.[11]
Structure[]
NBPF19 is expected to undergo many post-translational modifications, most notably phosphorylation and sumoylation. The protein is extensively phosphorylated on serine, threonine and tyrosine residues in a repetitive pattern seen in the figure to the left.[11] There are 14 predicted repeats within the protein sequence likely to be sites of sumoylation.[12]
The tertiary structure of NBPF19 is predicted to be roughly 50% coiled-coil and 40% alpha helical.[13] There is no presence of a signal peptide or any transmembrane domains.[14] NBPF19 is likely localized to the nucleus due to the presence of a nuclear localization signal near its 5' terminus.[15]
Homology[]
NBPF19 is one of 26 identified members of the neuroblastoma breakpoint family of proteins in humans. Sequence similarity among these proteins is largely limited to conservation of DUF1220 domains.[8] The most highly-similar paralogs are listed below:
Selected NBPF19 Paralogs
Gene name
Accession number
Length (aa)
Sequence Identity
NBPF14
NP_056198.2
2819
96%
NBPF20
NP_001265196
5207
93%
NBPF10
CAM23768
4612
93%
NBPF12
NP_001265070.1
1457
92%
NBPF1
NP_060410.2
1214
91%
NBPF26
NP_001338301.1
1366
75%
NBPF19 is not well conserved outside of humans and any notable conservation does not extend past primates and mammals.[16] Select species possess short sequences of similarity and are listed below: