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HR, HR lysine demethylase and nuclear receptor corepressor

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HR, HR lysine demethylase and nuclear receptor corepressor

  • This gene encodes a protein that is involved in hair growth. This protein functions as a transcriptional corepressor of multiple nuclear receptors, including thyroid hormone receptor, the retinoic acid receptor-related orphan receptors and the vitamin D receptors, and it interacts with histone deacetylases. The translation of this protein is modulated by a regulatory open reading frame (ORF) that exists upstream of the primary ORF. Mutations in this upstream ORF cause Marie Unna hereditary hypotrichosis (MUHH), an autosomal dominant form of genetic hair loss. Mutations in this gene also cause autosomal recessive congenital alopecia and atrichia with papular lesions, other diseases resulting in hair loss. Two transcript variants encoding different isoforms have been found for this gene. [provided by RefSeq, Oct 2014]

  • Gene Synonyms (ALUNC, AU, HSA277165, HYPT4, MUHH, MUHH1, lysine-specific demethylase hairless, [histone H3]-dimethyl-L-lysine(9) demethylase hairless, hair growth associated, hairless homolog, protein hairless,)
  • NCBI Gene ID: 55806
  • Species: Homo sapiens (Human)
  • UNIPROT ID#>>O43593
  • 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.

HR lysine demethylase and nuclear receptor corepressor 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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