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APEX1, apurinic/apyrimidinic endodeoxyribonuclease 1

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APEX1, apurinic/apyrimidinic endodeoxyribonuclease 1

  • The APEX gene encodes the major AP endonuclease in human cells. It encodes the APEX endonuclease, a DNA repair enzyme with apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) activity. Such AP activity sites occur frequently in DNA molecules by spontaneous hydrolysis, by DNA damaging agents or by DNA glycosylases that remove specific abnormal bases. The AP sites are the most frequent pre-mutagenic lesions that can prevent normal DNA replication. Splice variants have been found for this gene; all encode the same protein. Disruptions in the biological functions related to APEX are associated with many various malignancies and neurodegenerative diseases.[provided by RefSeq, Dec 2019]

  • Gene Synonyms (DNA-(apurinic or apyrimidinic site) endonuclease, AP endonuclease class I, AP lyase, APEX nuclease (multifunctional DNA repair enzyme) 1, DNA-(apurinic or apyrimidinic site) lyase, apurinic-apyrimidinic endonuclease 1, apurinic/apyrimidinic (abasic) endonuclease, deoxyribonuclease (apurinic or apyrimidinic), protein REF-1, redox factor-1, APE, APE1, APEN, APEX, APX, HAP1, REF1,)
  • NCBI Gene ID: 328
  • Species: Homo sapiens (Human)
  • UNIPROT ID#>>P27695
    UNIPROT ID#>>Q5TZP7
  • View the NCBI Database for this Gene »

The information on this page was collected from publicly accessible databases, and is periodically updated. Promega makes no claims to accuracy, or ownership of these genes.

Gene products are often involved in multiple pathways and networks within a living cell. Learn more about other interacting partners.

apurinic/apyrimidinic endodeoxyribonuclease 1 interacts with:

The information on this page was collected from publicly accessible databases, and is periodically updated. Promega makes no claims to accuracy, or ownership of these genes.

Paste a protein or nucleic acid sequence in the box below to confirm that it matches this gene’s reference sequence(s). Click on a link under RELATED ORF CLONES to see how a sequence matches to an experimentally-validated ORF clone.

The information on this page was collected from publicly accessible databases, and is periodically updated. Promega makes no claims to accuracy, or ownership of these genes.

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