Azin1 antizyme inhibitor 1 [ Mus musculus (house mouse) ]
Source: NCBI Gene (ID 54375)
Symbol: Azin1
Full name: antizyme inhibitor 1
Gene type: protein coding
RefSeq status: REVIEWED
Organism: Mus musculus
Also known as: 1700085L02Rik; AZI; Oazi; Oazin
Summary: The protein encoded by this gene belongs to the antizyme inhibitor family, which plays a role in cell growth and proliferation by maintaining polyamine homeostasis within the cell. Antizyme inhibitors are homologs of ornithine decarboxylase (ODC, the key enzyme in polyamine biosynthesis) that have lost the ability to decarboxylase ornithine; however, retain the ability to bind to antizymes. Antizymes negatively regulate intracellular polyamine levels by binding to ODC and targeting it for degradation, as well as by inhibiting polyamine uptake. Antizyme inhibitors function as positive regulators of polyamine levels by sequestering antizymes and neutralizing their effect. This gene encodes antizyme inhibitor 1, the first member of this gene family that is ubiquitously expressed, and is localized in the nucleus and cytoplasm. Overexpression of antizyme inhibitor 1 gene has been associated with increased proliferation, cellular transformation and tumorigenesis. Gene knockout studies showed that homozygous mutant mice lacking functional antizyme inhibitor 1 gene died at birth with abnormal liver morphology. RNA editing of this gene, predominantly in the liver tissue, has been linked to the progression of hepatocellular carcinoma. Alternatively spliced transcript variants have been described for this gene. [provided by RefSeq, Sep 2014]
Expression: Ubiquitous expression in small intestine adult (RPKM 42.0), duodenum adult (RPKM 41.1) and 28 other tissues
Orthologs: human
Gene size: 35833bp
Exon count: 13