| REV1 |
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| Available structures |
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| PDB | Ortholog search: PDBe RCSB |
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| List of PDB id codes |
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2EBW, 2LSI, 2LSK, 2LSY, 3GQC, 3VU7, 4BA9, 4EXT, 4GK0, 4GK5, 2N1G |
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| Identifiers |
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| Aliases | REV1, REV1L, AIBP80, DNA directed polymerase, REV1 DNA directed polymerase |
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| External IDs | OMIM: 606134; MGI: 1929074; HomoloGene: 32309; GeneCards: REV1; OMA:REV1 - orthologs |
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| Gene location (Mouse) |
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| | Chr. | Chromosome 1 (mouse) |
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| | Band | 1|1 B | Start | 38,052,786 bp |
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| End | 38,129,801 bp |
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| Wikidata |
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DNA repair protein REV1 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the REV1 gene.
This gene encodes a protein with similarity to the S. cerevisiae mutagenesis protein Rev1. The Rev1 proteins contain a BRCT domain, which is important in protein-protein interactions. A suggested role for the human Rev1-like protein is as a scaffold that recruits DNA polymerases involved in translesion synthesis (TLS) of damaged DNA. Two alternatively spliced transcript variants that encode different proteins have been found.
Rev1 is a Y family DNA polymerase; it is sometimes referred to as a deoxycytidyl transferase because it only inserts deoxycytidine (dC) across from lesions. Whether G, A, T, C, or an abasic site, Rev1 will always add a C. Rev1 has the ability to always add a C, because it uses an arginine as a template which complements well with C. Yet it is believed that Rev1 rarely uses its polymerase activity; rather it is thought that Rev1's primary role is as a protein landing pad, whereby it helps direct the recruitment of TLS proteins, especially Pol ζ (Rev3/Rev7).