Crabbe M J
FEBS Lett. 1985 Feb 11;181(1):157-9. doi: 10.1016/0014-5793(85)81133-9.
The human cellular myc gene is one of about 20 cellular oncogenes which code for a variety of proteins including protein kinases and growth factors. The human gene is related to the avian myelocytomatosis leukaemia virus MC29 and produces a binding protein which may be involved in regulation of gene expression and cellular differentiation and proliferation. The crystallins are proteins in the eye lens synthesised at different stages of cell differentiation and proliferation, and whose short range order is necessary for lens transparency. Computer-based sequence comparisons show that beta Bp and gamma II crystallins, which show partial sequence homology and conservation of 'Greek Key' motives are also partially homologous to two regions on the human myc protein, though this protein probably does not conserve the 'Greek Key' structural motives.