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Golgi reassembly-stacking protein 1 (GORASP1) also known as Golgi reassembly-stacking protein of 65 kDa (GRASP65) is a protein that in humans is encoded by the GORASP1gene.[5]
Function
The Golgi complex plays a key role in the sorting and modification of proteins exported from the endoplasmic reticulum. The GORASP1 protein is a peripheral membrane protein anchored to the lipid bilayer through myristoylation of a glycine residue near the protein's amino terminus.[7] It is involved in establishing the stacked structure of the Golgi apparatus and linking the stacks into larger ribbons in vertebrate cells.[7] It is a caspase-3 substrate, and cleavage of this encoded protein contributes to Golgi fragmentation in apoptosis.[8][9] GORASP1 can form a complex with the Golgi matrix protein GM130, and this complex binds to the vesicle docking protein p115.[7][a] Several alternatively spliced transcript variants of this gene have been identified, but their full-length natures have not been determined.[5]
Jesch SA (July 2002). "Inheriting a structural scaffold for Golgi biosynthesis". BioEssays. 24 (7): 584–7. doi:10.1002/bies.10122. PMID12111718.
Protopopov A, Kashuba V, Zabarovska VI, Muravenko OV, Lerman MI, Klein G, Zabarovsky ER (January 2003). "An integrated physical and gene map of the 3.5-Mb chromosome 3p21.3 (AP20) region implicated in major human epithelial malignancies". Cancer Research. 63 (2): 404–12. PMID12543795.