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Brain cytoplasmic RNA 1 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the BCYRN1 gene.
[1]
Function
This gene, which encodes a neural small non-messenger RNA, is a member of the family of interspersed repetitive DNA, and its product represents an example of a primate tissue-specific RNA polymerase III transcript. The RNA sequence is divided into three domains: a 5' portion homologous to the Alu Lm, a central adenosine-rich region, and the terminal 43-nt nonrepetitive domain. It is believed that this gene was retropositionally generated and recruited into a function regulating dendritic protein biosynthesis. At least two pseudogenes of this gene have been identified.
Iacoangeli A, Lin Y, Morley EJ, Muslimov IA, Bianchi R, Reilly J, Weedon J, Diallo R, Böcker W, Tiedge H (2004). "BC200 RNA in invasive and preinvasive breast cancer". Carcinogenesis. 25 (11): 2125–33. doi:10.1093/carcin/bgh228. PMID15240511.
Kobayashi S, Higuchi T, Anzai K (2005). "Application of the BC1 RNA gene promoter for short hairpin RNA expression in cultured neuronal cells". Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 334 (4): 1305–9. doi:10.1016/j.bbrc.2005.07.033. PMID16054886.