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We report here the identification and partial characterization of a human gene (designated AHNAK) that encodes an unusually large protein (approximately 700 kDa). AHNAK is expressed by means of a 17.5-kilobase mRNA in diverse cellular lineages but is typically repressed in cell lines derived from human neuroblastomas and in several other types of tumors. Unique-sequence domains at the two ends of the protein flank a large internal domain (approximately 4300 amino acids) composed of highly conserved repeated elements, most of which are 128 amino acids in length. The repeated elements in turn display a redundant motif, marked by the recurrence of proline at every seventh residue. Within these sequences, hydrophobic and hydrophilic residues alternate in a manner that is incompatible with a helical coiled-coil structure. Instead, we propose a structure resembling a beta-strand but with a periodicity of 2.33. The structure would engender a polyionic rod approximately 1.2 microns long. Preliminary evidence indicates that the protein resides predominantly within the nucleus, but no function has yet been discerned.
Shtivelman et al. (Mon,) studied this question.