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MKI67IP

Ki67 - an established marker for labelling proliferating cells

Ki-67/MKI67 is an antigen which is expressed during G1, S, G2, and M phases of the cell cycle (mitotically active cells), but not during G0 phase (resting cells). It is a large protein with expected molecular weight of about 395 kDa, and it has a very complex localization pattern within the nucleus, one which changes during cell cycle progression. During interphase, Ki-67 antigen can be exclusively detected in the nucleus, whereas in mitotic phase, most of Ki67 pool gets relocated to the chromosomal surface.

Ki67 - A Crucial Cellular Proliferation Marker

The Ki67 antigen is a prototypic cell cycle-related protein expressed by proliferating cells in all phases of the active cell cycle (G1, S, G2 and M). It is a non-histone nuclear protein originally identified in a Hodgkin's lymphoma-derived cell line. Ki67 interacts with KIF15 and MKI67IP, and is approximately 395 kD. It exhibits a complex nuclear localization pattern that is cell cycle-dependent - expression peaks during late G1, S, G2, and M phases, but is undetectable in G0.