Chloride intracellular channel protein 6 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the CLIC6gene.[5][6]
The CLIC6 gene encodes a member of the chloride intracellular channel family of proteins. The gene is part of a large triplicated region found on chromosomes 1, 6, and 21. An alternatively spliced transcript variant has been described, but its biological validity has not been determined.[6]
CLIC6 has been shown to form chloride selective redox and pH regulated ion channels. It is predominantly expressed in the plasma membrane of lung epithelial cells. [8]
Strippoli P, D'Addabbo P, Lenzi L, Giannone S, Canaider S, Casadei R, et al. (August 2002). "Segmental paralogy in the human genome: a large-scale triplication on 1p, 6p, and 21q". Mammalian Genome. 13 (8): 456–462. doi:10.1007/s00335-001-2157-0. PMID12226712. S2CID26059147.
Scanlan MJ, Gout I, Gordon CM, Williamson B, Stockert E, Gure AO, et al. (March 2001). "Humoral immunity to human breast cancer: antigen definition and quantitative analysis of mRNA expression". Cancer Immunity. 1: 4. PMID12747765.
Griffon N, Jeanneteau F, Prieur F, Diaz J, Sokoloff P (September 2003). "CLIC6, a member of the intracellular chloride channel family, interacts with dopamine D(2)-like receptors". Brain Research. Molecular Brain Research. 117 (1): 47–57. doi:10.1016/S0169-328X(03)00283-3. PMID14499480.
Friedli M, Guipponi M, Bertrand S, Bertrand D, Neerman-Arbez M, Scott HS, et al. (November 2003). "Identification of a novel member of the CLIC family, CLIC6, mapping to 21q22.12". Gene. 320: 31–40. doi:10.1016/S0378-1119(03)00830-8. PMID14597386.