Basic Information

Symbol
RPS3
RNA class
mRNA
Alias
Ribosomal Protein S3 40S Ribosomal Protein S3 US3 S3 Small Ribosomal Subunit Protein US3 IMR-90 Ribosomal Protein S3 FLJ26283 FLJ27450 MGC87870 EC 4.2.99.18
Location (GRCh38)
Forensic tag(s)
Postmortem interval inference

MANE select

Transcript ID
NM_001005.5
Sequence length
2059.0 nt
GC content
0.4502

Transcripts

ID Sequence Length GC content
CCUUUCCUUUCAGCGGAGCGCGGCGGCAAGAUGGCAGUGCAAAUAUCCA… 2059 nt 0.4502
CCUUUCCUUUCAGCGGAGCGCGGCGGCAAGAUGGCAGUGCAAAUAUCCA… 1341 nt 0.4952
CCUUUCCUUUCAGCGGAGCGCGGCGGCAAGAUGGCAGUGCAAAUAUCCA… 2138 nt 0.4457
CCUUUCCUUUCAGCGGAGCGCGGCGGCAAGAUGGCAGUGCAAAUAUCCA… 1928 nt 0.4487
Summary

Ribosomes, the organelles that catalyze protein synthesis, consist of a small 40S subunit and a large 60S subunit. Together these subunits are composed of 4 RNA species and approximately 80 structurally distinct proteins. This gene encodes a ribosomal protein that is a component of the 40S subunit, where it forms part of the domain where translation is initiated. The protein belongs to the S3P family of ribosomal proteins. Studies of the mouse and rat proteins have demonstrated that the protein has an extraribosomal role as an endonuclease involved in the repair of UV-induced DNA damage. The protein appears to be located in both the cytoplasm and nucleus but not in the nucleolus. Higher levels of expression of this gene in colon adenocarcinomas and adenomatous polyps compared to adjacent normal colonic mucosa have been observed. This gene is co-transcribed with the small nucleolar RNA genes U15A and U15B, which are located in its first and fifth introns, respectively. As is typical for genes encoding ribosomal proteins, there are multiple processed pseudogenes of this gene dispersed through the genome. Multiple alternatively spliced transcript variants encoding different isoforms have been found for this gene. [provided by RefSeq, May 2012]

Forensic Context

A study in Sarcophaga peregrina evaluated ten candidate reference genes for RT-qPCR normalization across different temperatures, identifying 18S rRNA and 28S rRNA as the most stable [Shang et al. DOI:10.1093/jme/tjz137].