Tag Content
SG ID
SG00009351 
UniProt Accession
Theoretical PI
4.35  
Molecular Weight
83954 Da  
Genbank Nucleotide ID
Genbank Protein ID
Gene Name
Nasp 
Gene Synonyms/Alias
 
Protein Name
Nuclear autoantigenic sperm protein 
Protein Synonyms/Alias
NASP 
Organism
Mus musculus (Mouse) 
NCBI Taxonomy ID
10090 
Chromosome Location
chr:4;116273657-116300556;-1
View in Ensembl genome browser  
Function in Stage
Uncertain 
Function in Cell Type
Uncertain 
Probability (GAS) of Function in Spermatogenesis
0.599318417 
The probability was calculated by GAS algorithm, ranging from 0 to 1. The closer it is to 1, the more possibly it functions in spermatogenesis.
Description
Temporarily unavailable 
Abstract of related literatures
1. Nuclear autoantigenic sperm protein (NASP), initially described as a highly autoimmunogenic testis and sperm-specific protein, is a histone-binding protein that is a homologue of the N1/N2 gene expressed in oocytes of Xenopus laevis. Here, we report a somatic form of NASP (sNASP) present in all mitotic cells examined, including mouse embryonic cells and several mouse and human tissue culture cell lines. Affinity chromatography and histone isolation demonstrate that NASP from myeloma cells is complexed only with H1, linker histones. Somatic NASP is a shorter version of testicular NASP (tNASP) with two deletions in the coding region arising from alternative splicing and differs from tNASP in its 5' untranslated regions. We examined the relationship between NASP mRNA expression and the cell cycle and report that in cultures of synchronized mouse 3T3 cells and HeLa cells sNASP mRNA levels increase during S-phase and decline in G(2), concomitant with histone mRNA levels. NASP protein levels remain stable in these cells but become undetectable in confluent cultures of nondividing CV-1 cells and in nonmitotic cells in various body tissues. Expression of sNASP mRNA is regulated during the cell cycle and, consistent with a role as a histone transport protein, NASP mRNA expression parallels histone mRNA expression. PMID: [10893414] 

2. A multichaperone nucleosome-remodeling complex that contains the H1 linker histone chaperone nuclear autoantigenic sperm protein (NASP) has recently been described. Linker histones (H1) are required for the proper completion of normal development, and NASP transports H1 histones into nuclei and exchanges H1 histones with DNA. Consequently, we investigated whether NASP is required for normal cell cycle progression and development. We now report that without sufficient NASP, HeLa cells and U2OS cells are unable to replicate their DNA and progress through the cell cycle and that the NASP(-/-) null mutation causes embryonic lethality. Although the null mutation NASP(-/-) caused embryonic lethality, null embryos survive until the blastocyst stage, which may be explained by the presence of stored NASP protein in the cytoplasm of oocytes. We conclude from this study that NASP and therefore the linker histones are key players in the assembly of chromatin after DNA replication. PMID: [16728391] 

3. This study describes comprehensive polling of transcription start and termination sites and analysis of previously unidentified full-length complementary DNAs derived from the mouse genome. We identify the 5' and 3' boundaries of 181,047 transcripts with extensive variation in transcripts arising from alternative promoter usage, splicing, and polyadenylation. There are 16,247 new mouse protein-coding transcripts, including 5154 encoding previously unidentified proteins. Genomic mapping of the transcriptome reveals transcriptional forests, with overlapping transcription on both strands, separated by deserts in which few transcripts are observed. The data provide a comprehensive platform for the comparative analysis of mammalian transcriptional regulation in differentiation and development. PMID: [16141072] 

4. The National Institutes of Health's Mammalian Gene Collection (MGC) project was designed to generate and sequence a publicly accessible cDNA resource containing a complete open reading frame (ORF) for every human and mouse gene. The project initially used a random strategy to select clones from a large number of cDNA libraries from diverse tissues. Candidate clones were chosen based on 5'-EST sequences, and then fully sequenced to high accuracy and analyzed by algorithms developed for this project. Currently, more than 11,000 human and 10,000 mouse genes are represented in MGC by at least one clone with a full ORF. The random selection approach is now reaching a saturation point, and a transition to protocols targeted at the missing transcripts is now required to complete the mouse and human collections. Comparison of the sequence of the MGC clones to reference genome sequences reveals that most cDNA clones are of very high sequence quality, although it is likely that some cDNAs may carry missense variants as a consequence of experimental artifact, such as PCR, cloning, or reverse transcriptase errors. Recently, a rat cDNA component was added to the project, and ongoing frog (Xenopus) and zebrafish (Danio) cDNA projects were expanded to take advantage of the high-throughput MGC pipeline. PMID: [15489334] 

5. NASP is an H1 histone-binding protein that is cell cycle-regulated and occurs in two major forms: tNASP, found in gametes, embryonic cells, and transformed cells; and sNASP, found in all rapidly dividing somatic cells (Richardson, R. T., Batova, I. N., Widgren, E. E., Zheng, L. X., Whitfield, M., Marzluff, W. F., and O'Rand, M. G. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 30378-30386). When full-length tNASP fused to green fluorescent protein (GFP) is transiently transfected into HeLa cells, it is efficiently transported into the nucleus within 2 h after translation in the cytoplasm, whereas the NASP nuclear localization signal (NLS) deletion mutant (NASP-DeltaNLS-GFP) is retained in the cytoplasm. In HeLa cells synchronized by a double thymidine block and transiently transfected to overexpress full-length tNASP or NASP-DeltaNLS, progression through the G(1)/S border is delayed. Cells transiently transfected to overexpress the histone-binding site (HBS) deletion mutant (NASP-DeltaHBS) or sNASP were not delayed in progression through the G(1)/S border. By using a DNA supercoiling assay, in vitro binding data demonstrate that H1 histone-tNASP complexes can transfer H1 histones to DNA, whereas NASP-DeltaHBS cannot. Measurement of NASP mobility in the nucleus by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching indicates that NASP mobility is virtually identical to that reported for H1 histones. These data suggest that NASP-H1 complexes exist in the nucleus and that tNASP can influence cell cycle progression through the G(1)/S border through mediation of DNA-H1 histone binding. PMID: [12509435] 

6. NASP (nuclear autoantigenic sperm protein) is a linker histone-binding protein found in all dividing cells that is regulated by the cell cycle (Richardson, R. T., Batova, I. N., Widgren, E. E., Zheng, L. X., Whitfield, M., Marzluff, W. F., and O'Rand, M. G. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 30378-30386), and in the nucleus linker histones not bound to DNA are bound to NASP (Alekseev, O. M., Bencic, D. C., Richardson R. T., Widgren E. E., and O'Rand, M. G. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 8846-8852). In mouse spermatogenic cells tNASP binds the testis-specific linker histone H1t. Utilizing a cross-linker, 3,3'-dithiobissulfosuccinimidyl propionate, and mass spectrometry, we have identified HSP90 as a testis/embryo form of NASP (tNASP)-binding partner. In vitro assays demonstrate that the association of tNASP with HSP90 stimulated the ATPase activity of HSP90 and increased the binding of H1t to tNASP. HSP90 and tNASP are present in both nuclear and cytoplasmic fractions of mouse spermatogenic cells; however, HSP90 bound to NASP only in the cytoplasm. In vitro nuclear import assays on permeabilized HeLa cells demonstrate that tNASP, in the absence of any other cytoplasmic factors, transports linker histones into the nucleus in an energy and nuclear localization signal-dependent manner. Consequently we hypothesize that in the cytoplasm linker histones are bound to a complex containing NASP and HSP90 whose ATPase activity is stimulated by binding NASP. NASP-H1 is subsequently released from the complex and translocates to the nucleus where the H1 is released for binding to the DNA. PMID: [15533935] 

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Function
Required for DNA replication, normal cell cycleprogression and cell proliferation. Forms a cytoplasmic complexwith HSP90 and linker H1 histones and stimulates HSP90 ATPaseactivity. NASP and H1 histone are subsequently released from thecomplex and translocate to the nucleus where the histone isreleased for binding to DNA. 
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Subcellular Location
Cytoplasm. Nucleus. 
Tissue Specificity
Isoform 1 is found in gametes, embryonic cellsand transformed cells. Isoform 2 is found in dividing somaticcells (at protein level). 
Gene Ontology
GO IDGO termEvidence
GO:0005737 C:cytoplasm IEA:UniProtKB-SubCell.
GO:0005634 C:nucleus IDA:MGI.
GO:0001824 P:blastocyst development IMP:UniProtKB.
GO:0007049 P:cell cycle IDA:UniProtKB.
GO:0008283 P:cell proliferation IDA:UniProtKB.
GO:0006260 P:DNA replication IDA:UniProtKB.
GO:0043486 P:histone exchange IDA:UniProtKB.
GO:0015031 P:protein transport IEA:UniProtKB-KW.
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Interpro
IPR019544;    Tetratricopeptide_SHNi-TPR_dom.
IPR001440;    TPR-1.
IPR013026;    TPR-contain_dom.
IPR011990;    TPR-like_helical.
IPR019734;    TPR_repeat.
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Pfam
PF10516;    SHNi-TPR;    1.
PF00515;    TPR_1;    1.
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SMART
SM00028;    TPR;    3.
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PROSITE
PS50005;    TPR;    3.
PS50293;    TPR_REGION;    2.
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PRINTS
Created Date
18-Oct-2012 
Record Type
GAS predicted 
Sequence Annotation
INIT_MET      1      1       Removed (By similarity).
CHAIN         2    773       Nuclear autoantigenic sperm protein.
                             /FTId=PRO_0000261597.
REPEAT       43     76       TPR 1.
REPEAT      237    270       TPR 2.
REPEAT      528    561       TPR 3.
REPEAT      570    603       TPR 4.
REGION      116    127       Histone-binding (By similarity).
REGION      210    242       Histone-binding (By similarity).
REGION      455    498       Histone-binding (By similarity).
COILED      126    160       Potential.
COILED      595    648       Potential.
MOTIF       702    708       Nuclear localization signal (Potential).
COMPBIAS    111    644       Glu-rich.
MOD_RES       2      2       N-acetylalanine (By similarity).
MOD_RES      30     30       Phosphoserine (By similarity).
MOD_RES      33     33       N6-acetyllysine (By similarity).
MOD_RES     188    188       Phosphoserine (By similarity).
MOD_RES     242    242       Phosphoserine (By similarity).
MOD_RES     377    377       Phosphothreonine (By similarity).
MOD_RES     395    395       Phosphoserine (By similarity).
MOD_RES     450    450       Phosphothreonine (By similarity).
MOD_RES     463    463       Phosphothreonine (By similarity).
MOD_RES     466    466       Phosphoserine (By similarity).
MOD_RES     483    483       Phosphoserine (By similarity).
MOD_RES     489    489       Phosphoserine (By similarity).
MOD_RES     669    669       Phosphothreonine (By similarity).
MOD_RES     712    712       Phosphoserine (By similarity).
VAR_SEQ      74    100       Missing (in isoform 2).
                             /FTId=VSP_052237.
VAR_SEQ     138    462       Missing (in isoform 2).
                             /FTId=VSP_052238.
CONFLICT    432    432       K -> R (in Ref. 3; BAE21303).
CONFLICT    451    451       P -> Q (in Ref. 3; BAE21303).
CONFLICT    462    462       Missing (in Ref. 2; AAK31170).
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Nucleotide Sequence
Length: 2543 bp   Go to nucleotide: FASTA
Protein Sequence
Length: 773 bp   Go to amino acid: FASTA
The verified Protein-Protein interaction information
UniProt
Gene Symbol Ref Databases
AireIntAct 
Cdk1BioGRID 
AIREIntAct 
Cdk1BioGRID 
Hist1h1cIntAct 
Hist1h1dIntAct 
Hist1h1eIntAct 
Hist1h1bIntAct 
Hspa2BioGRID 
Hspa2BioGRID 
Other Protein-Protein interaction resources
String database  
View Microarray data
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