| ID | Sequence | Length | GC content |
|---|---|---|---|
| AAGGUAGCACAUUGCCGCACAAGACCGCUCUACAGUCUCAUCCAAGACU… | 1063 nt | 0.3866 | |
| AUUUCCUCGCGUUAUAACGAAUCGGCGUCUAAGGGUUUAAGUGUCACUU… | 1029 nt | 0.4004 | |
| AAGGUAGCACAUUGCCGCACAAGACCGCUCUACAGUCUCAUCCAAGACU… | 975 nt | 0.3856 | |
| AUUUCCUCGCGUUAUAACGAAUCGGCGUCUAAGGGUUUAAGUGUCACUU… | 1048 nt | 0.4055 | |
| AUUUCCUCGCGUUAUAACGAAUCGGCGUCUAAGGGUUUAAGUGUCACUU… | 1033 nt | 0.4076 | |
| AUUUCCUCGCGUUAUAACGAAUCGGCGUCUAAGGGUUUAAGUGUCACUU… | 1030 nt | 0.4068 | |
| AUUUCCUCGCGUUAUAACGAAUCGGCGUCUAAGGGUUUAAGUGUCACUU… | 942 nt | 0.4076 | |
| AAGGUAGCACAUUGCCGCACAAGACCGCUCUACAGUCUCAUCCAAGACU… | 1252 nt | 0.4129 |
TIMM9 belongs to a family of evolutionarily conserved proteins that are organized in heterooligomeric complexes in the mitochondrial intermembrane space. These proteins mediate the import and insertion of hydrophobic membrane proteins into the mitochondrial inner membrane.[supplied by OMIM, Apr 2004]
A study in mice demonstrated that the TIMM9 was down-regulated in brain tissue at 8 hours (0.494-fold) and 24 hours (0.482-fold) following whole-body irradiation with 10 Gy γ-rays, identifying it as a protein transport/folding marker responsive to ionizing radiation [Zhao et al. DOI:10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-05-2418].