JavaScript is disabled in your browser. Please enable JavaScript to view this website.

CECR2

Domain

The Bromo domain recognizes and binds acetylated histones (PubMed:22464331). Also recognizes and binds histones that are butyrylated (PubMed:26365797).

Function

Regulatory subunit of the ATP-dependent CERF-1 and CERF-5 ISWI chromatin remodeling complexes, which form ordered nucleosome arrays on chromatin and facilitate access to DNA during DNA-templated processes such as DNA replication, transcription, and repair (PubMed:15640247, PubMed:22464331, PubMed:26365797, PubMed:28801535). The complexes do not have the ability to slide mononucleosomes to the center of a DNA template (PubMed:28801535). The CERF-1 ISWI chromatin remodeling complex has a lower ATP hydrolysis rate than the CERF-5 ISWI chromatin remodeling complex (PubMed:28801535). Plays a role in various processes during development: required during embryogenesis for neural tube closure and inner ear development. In adults, required for spermatogenesis, via the formation of ISWI-type chromatin complexes (By similarity). In histone-modifying complexes, CECR2 recognizes and binds acylated histones: binds histones that are acetylated and/or butyrylated (PubMed:22464331, PubMed:26365797). May also be involved through its interaction with LRPPRC in the integration of cytoskeletal network with vesicular trafficking, nucleocytosolic shuttling, transcription, chromosome remodeling and cytokinesis (PubMed:11827465).

Tissue Specificity

Highly expressed in skeletal muscle, thymus, placenta and lung. Expressed at lower level in brain, heart, colon, spleen, kidney.

Cellular localization

Alternative names

KIAA1740, CECR2, Chromatin remodeling regulator CECR2, Cat eye syndrome critical region protein 2

swissprot:Q9BXF3 omim:607576 entrezGene:27443