Daxx is uniformly expressed throughout the body, except in the testes and
thymus, which have especially high expression of the protein. At the level of the cell, Daxx is found in the
cytoplasm, interacting with Fas-receptor or other cytoplasmic molecules, as well as in the
nucleus, where it interacts with some subnuclear structures. Several additional interacting proteins are known, but not always is there an understanding of the specific function and relevance of this interaction.
Nuclear When the PML-NB is absent or disrupted, Daxx is delocalized and apoptosis does not occur. This interaction was demonstrated when PML-NB disrupted cells were treated and Daxx relocalized with the PML-NB.
ATRX, a centromeric heterochromatin component co-localizes with Daxx. This partnership is found mainly in the S-phase of the cell cycle. No expression of Daxx leads to malfunction of S phase and cells with two nuclei are formed. Another centromeric component, CENP-C, associates with Daxx during
interphase. While at first Daxx was said to be a "death protein", it is suggested that associating with centromeric components leads to another function of Daxx.
Cytoplasmic and membrane Fas-receptor stimulation causes Daxx to
translocate out of the nucleus and into the cytoplasm. The breakdown of glucose produces reactive oxygen species (
ROS). These induce extracellular Daxx to translocalize into the cytoplasm following an association with
ASK1 (Apoptosis signal-regulating kinase1). Another mechanism for exogenous Daxx import involves
CRM1. This transport mechanism is phosphorylation dependent. Nevertheless, it is not known whether the Fas-receptor stimuli or the ASK1 overexpression are caused by ROS or CRM1 mediated export. == Role in apoptosis ==