Date published: 2025-10-11

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C20orf106 Inhibitors

C20orf106, officially known as "Chromosome 20 Open Reading Frame 106," is a protein that in humans is encoded by the gene located on the 20th chromosome. The precise biological function of C20orf106 is not comprehensively understood, and it is considered to be part of the cohort of orphan proteins, which are proteins that have been identified at the genetic level but whose functions have not been clearly established.The gene encoding C20orf106 is part of a larger genomic landscape that includes many genes with known and unknown functions. The designation "orf" within its name signifies "open reading frame," indicative of a segment of DNA that could potentially encode a protein, and its discovery may be found in genomic sequencing efforts that have identified numerous such regions across the human genome.

Proteins like C20orf106 are often of particular interest in the field of bioinformatics and functional genomics, where in silico (computer-based) analyses can provide predictions about their structure, evolutionary relationships, and possible interactions with other proteins or nucleic acids. These predictions, while informative, need to be followed up with empirical research for validation.The chromosomal location and the sequence homology suggest that C20orf106 may have a role in cellular processes typical of other proteins encoded in the vicinity, or it may interact with such proteins. It is possible that C20orf106 participates in specific cellular functions, such as signal transduction, transcriptional regulation, or other cellular processes that are often governed by proteins encoded by the genome's open reading frames.

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