Characterization of human keratin-associated protein 1 family members
- PMID: 12895003
- DOI: 10.1046/j.1523-1747.2003.12180.x
Characterization of human keratin-associated protein 1 family members
Abstract
Keratin-associated proteins are involved in the formation of the cross-linked network of the keratin-intermediate filament proteins that support hair fibers. In recent years, several keratin-associated protein genes have been identified and become an attractive topic in hair research. More recently, we isolated two cDNA encoding novel members of the human keratin-associated protein 1 family (human keratin-associated protein 1.6 and human keratin-associated protein 1.7), and described their expression in the hair follicle by RNA in situ hybridization. A comparison of human keratin-associated protein 1.6 and human keratin-associated protein 1.7 with other human keratin-associated protein 1 members revealed that keratin-associated protein 1 proteins are fundamentally composed of five distinct domains, and that they can be classified primarily by a striking variation in double cysteine-containing pentapeptide repeats in the repetitive I domain. The sum of the data analyzed suggests that human keratin-associated protein 1 family genes may have arisen mainly through gene duplication of the cysteine-repeat motifs during evolution.
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