cell division cycle 25C

Symbol

CDC25C (may also be known as: None)

Organism

Human

Description

This gene is highly conserved during evolution and it plays a key role in the regulation of cell division. The encoded protein is a tyrosine phosphatase and belongs to the Cdc25 phosphatase family. It directs dephosphorylation of cyclin B-bound CDC2 and triggers entry into mitosis. It is also thought to suppress p53-induced growth arrest. Multiple alternatively spliced transcript variants of this gene have been described, however, the full-length nature of many of them is not known. [provided by RefSeq, Jul 2008]

Orthologs

SymbolSpecies
cdc-25.2 Caenorhabditis elegans
Cdc25c Mus musculus
Cdc25c Rattus norvegicus

Links to external resources

Changes associated with this gene

GO Terms

GO IDGO TermGO Category
GO:0000075 cell cycle checkpoint biological_process
GO:0000079 regulation of cyclin-dependent protein kinase activity biological_process
GO:0000086 G2/M transition of mitotic cell cycle biological_process
GO:0000087 M phase of mitotic cell cycle biological_process
GO:0000278 mitotic cell cycle biological_process
GO:0006260 DNA replication biological_process
GO:0007088 regulation of mitosis biological_process
GO:0007089 traversing start control point of mitotic cell cycle biological_process
GO:0008283 cell proliferation biological_process
GO:0035335 peptidyl-tyrosine dephosphorylation biological_process
GO:0044419 interspecies interaction between organisms biological_process
GO:0051301 cell division biological_process
GO:0051726 regulation of cell cycle biological_process
GO:0005622 intracellular cellular_component
GO:0005634 nucleus cellular_component
GO:0005654 nucleoplasm cellular_component
GO:0005737 cytoplasm cellular_component
GO:0005829 cytosol cellular_component
GO:0004725 protein tyrosine phosphatase activity molecular_function
GO:0005515 protein binding molecular_function
GO:0016787 hydrolase activity molecular_function
GO:0019901 protein kinase binding molecular_function
GO:0050699 WW domain binding molecular_function