Chlamydomonas reinhardtii      DSP/CDC14


※ CDC14 family introduction

    CDC14 phosphatase belongs to a family of highly conserved DUSP phosphatases. All CDC14 family members share a conserved N-terminal core domain, in which two subdomains contribute to critical function, one is involved in substrate specificity and another subdomain acts as the phosphatase catalytic domain. The C-terminal domain of CDC14 family is variable which might be involved in subcellular localization. Protein phosphatases of CDC14 family are key regulators in cell cycle and they are characterized by controlling exit from mitosis. CDC14 is well understood in budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and studies show that ScCDC14 plays an important role in DNA replication, mitotic exit and cytokinesis. In Saccharomyces pombe CDC14-Like phosphatase, also known as Clp1, participates in G2−M transition and cytokinesis. In mammals, human CDC14B is important in regulating centriole duplication, cell cycle progression, mitotic exit, DNA damage and DNA repair (1).

Reference
1. Mocciaro, A. and Schiebel, E. (2010) Cdc14: a highly conserved family of phosphatases with non-conserved functions? J Cell Sci, 123, 2867-2876. PMID: 20720150


There are 7 genes.  Reviewed (0 or Unreviewed (7

No.StatusiEKPD IDEnsemble Gene IDUniProt AccessionGene Name
1
iEKPD-Chr-0591
CHLREDRAFT_112184
A8I465
CDC14
2
iEKPD-Chr-g017
CHLREDRAFT_120200
A8J868
CHLREDRAFT_120200
3
iEKPD-Chr-g026
CHLREDRAFT_145427
A8IRQ3
CHLREDRAFT_145427
4
iEKPD-Chr-g009
CHLREDRAFT_93747
A8I6I3
CHLREDRAFT_93747
5
iEKPD-Chr-0573
CHLREDRAFT_160761
A8IAA3
CHLRE_02g077650v5
6
iEKPD-Chr-g023
CHLREDRAFT_184482
A8J277
MKP6
7
iEKPD-Chr-0582
CHLREDRAFT_194946
A8JH20
PTP1