Entity Details

Primary name POC1A_HUMAN
Entity type UniProt
Source Source Link

Details

AccessionQ8NBT0
EntryNamePOC1A_HUMAN
FullNamePOC1 centriolar protein homolog A
TaxID9606
Evidenceevidence at protein level
Length407
SequenceStatuscomplete
DateCreated2006-04-04
DateModified2021-06-02

Ontological Relatives

GenesPOC1A

GO terms

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GOName
GO:0000922 spindle pole
GO:0005737 cytoplasm
GO:0005813 centrosome
GO:0005814 centriole
GO:0030030 cell projection organization
GO:0036064 ciliary basal body

Subcellular Location

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Subcellular Location
Cytoplasm

Domains

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DomainNameCategoryType
IPR001680 WD40 repeatRepeatRepeat
IPR015943 WD40/YVTN repeat-like-containing domain superfamilyFamilyHomologous superfamily
IPR019775 WD40 repeat, conserved siteSiteConserved site
IPR020472 G-protein beta WD-40 repeatRepeatRepeat
IPR036322 WD40-repeat-containing domain superfamilyFamilyHomologous superfamily

Diseases

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Disease IDSourceNameDescription
614813 OMIMShort stature, onychodysplasia, facial dysmorphism, and hypotrichosis (SOFT)A syndrome characterized by severely short long bones, peculiar facies associated with paucity of hair, and nail anomalies. Growth retardation is evident on prenatal ultrasound as early as the second trimester of pregnancy, and affected individuals reach a final stature consistent with a height age of 6 years to 8 years. Relative macrocephaly is present during early childhood but head circumference is markedly low by adulthood. Psychomotor development is normal. Facial dysmorphism includes a long, triangular face with prominent nose and small ears, and affected individuals have an unusual high-pitched voice. Clinodactyly, brachydactyly, and hypoplastic distal phalanges and fingernails are present in association with postpubertal sparse and short hair. Typical skeletal findings include short and thick long bones with mild irregular metaphyseal changes, short femoral necks, and hypoplastic pelvis and sacrum. All long bones of the hand are short, with major delay of carpal ossification and cone-shaped epiphyses. Vertebral body ossification is also delayed. The disease is caused by variants affecting the gene represented in this entry. Cells derived from affected individuals have abnormal mitotic mechanics with multipolar spindles, in addition to clearly impaired ciliogenesis.