| TUBB3 | 
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| Identifiers | 
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| Aliases | TUBB3, CDCBM, CDCBM1, CFEOM3, CFEOM3A, FEOM3, TUBB4, beta-4, tubulin beta 3 class III | 
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| External IDs | OMIM: 602661; MGI: 107813; HomoloGene: 68503; GeneCards: TUBB3; OMA:TUBB3 - orthologs | 
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| | Gene location (Mouse) | 
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 |  |  | Chr. | Chromosome 8 (mouse) | 
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 |  |  | Band | 8|8 E1 | Start | 124,138,163 bp | 
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 | End | 124,148,754 bp | 
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| | RNA expression pattern | 
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 | Bgee | | Human | Mouse (ortholog) | 
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 | | Top expressed in |  | ganglionic eminence
 superior frontal gyrus
 Hypothalamus
 ventricular zone
 primary visual cortex
 prefrontal cortex
 right frontal lobe
 dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
 Brodmann area 9
 anterior cingulate cortex
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 | | Top expressed in |  | ganglionic eminence
 superior cervical ganglion
 perirhinal cortex
 medial ganglionic eminence
 entorhinal cortex
 facial motor nucleus
 CA3 field
 primary visual cortex
 superior frontal gyrus
 dentate gyrus of hippocampal formation granule cell
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 |  | More reference expression data | 
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 | BioGPS |  | 
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| Wikidata | 
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Tubulin beta-3 chain, Class III β-tubulin, βIII-tubulin (β3-tubulin) or β-tubulin III, is a microtubule element of the tubulin family found almost exclusively in neurons, and in testis cells. In humans, it is encoded by the TUBB3 gene.
It is possible to use monoclonal antibodies and immunohistochemistry to identify neurons in samples of brain tissue, separating neurons from glial cells, which do not express tubulin beta-3 chain.
Class III β-tubulin is one of the seven β-tubulin isotypes identified in the human genome, predominantly in neurons and the testis. It is conditionally expressed in a number of other tissues after exposure to a toxic microenvironment featured by hypoxia and poor nutrient supply. Posttranslational changes including phosphorylation and glycosylation are required for functional activity.
Class III β-tubulin's role in neural development has warranted its use as an early biomarker of neural cell differentiation from multi potent progenitors. TUBB3 inactivation impairs neural progenitor proliferation. Rescue experiments demonstrate the non-interchangeability of TUBB3 with other classes of β-tubulins which cannot restore the phenotype resulting from TUBB3 inactivation.  Congenital neurologic syndromes associated with TUBB3 missense mutations demonstrate the critical importance of class III β-tubulin for normal neural development.