Variants
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ASL Gene

argininosuccinate lyase

ALIAS SYMBOLS

  • ASAL

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Description

The ASL gene provides instructions for making the enzyme argininosuccinate lyase. This enzyme primarily participates in the urea cycle, a series of reactions that occur in liver cells. The urea cycle processes excess nitrogen, generated when protein is used by the body, to make a compound called urea that is excreted by the kidneys. Excreting the excess nitrogen prevents it from accumulating in the form of ammonia.

The specific role of the argininosuccinate lyase enzyme is to start the reaction in which the amino acid arginine, a building block of proteins, is produced from argininosuccinate, the molecule that carries the waste nitrogen collected earlier in the urea cycle. The arginine is later broken down into urea, which is excreted, and ornithine, which restarts the urea cycle.

In cells throughout the body, the argininosuccinate lyase enzyme is also involved in moving (transporting) arginine into cells to make a compound called nitric oxide. Nitric oxide is important for regulating blood flow and blood pressure.

CHROMOSOME

7


LOCATION

q11.21


LOCUS TYPE

gene with protein product

VARIANTS

385

SEE THE VARIANTS →

Phenotypes

External Links

  • HGNC

    HGNC:746

  • NCBI

    435

  • OMIM

    608310

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