VID27/YNL212W Summary Help

Standard Name VID27 1
Systematic Name YNL212W
Feature Type ORF, Verified
Description Cytoplasmic protein of unknown function; possibly involved in vacuolar protein degradation; not essential for proteasome-dependent degradation of fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase); null mutants exhibit normal growth (2, 3, 4)
Name Description Vacuolar Import and Degradation 1
Chromosomal Location
ChrXIV:247461 to 249809 | ORF Map | GBrowse
Gbrowse
Gene Ontology Annotations All VID27 GO evidence and references
  View Computational GO annotations for VID27
Molecular Function
Manually curated
Biological Process
Manually curated
Cellular Component
High-throughput
Large-scale survey
null
Resources
19 total interaction(s) for 17 unique genes/features.
Physical Interactions
  • Affinity Capture-MS: 16
  • Biochemical Activity: 3

Resources
Expression Summary
histogram
Resources
Localization
Phosphorylation PhosphoGRID | PhosphoPep Database
Structure
Homologs
sequence information
ChrXIV:247461 to 249809 | ORF Map | GBrowse
SGD ORF map
Last Update Coordinates: 2011-02-03 | Sequence: 1996-07-31
Subfeature details
Relative
Coordinates
Chromosomal
Coordinates
Most Recent Updates
Coordinates Sequence
CDS 1..2349 247461..249809 2011-02-03 1996-07-31
Retrieve sequences
Analyze Sequence
S288C only
S288C vs. other species
S288C vs. other strains
Resources
External Links All Associated Seq | Entrez Gene | Entrez RefSeq Protein | MIPS | Search all NCBI (Entrez) | UniProtKB
Primary SGDIDS000005156
References cited on this page View Complete Literature Guide for VID27
1) Hung, G.G., et al.  (2000) A novel membrane-associated protein Vid27p regulates import of fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase into Vid vesicles
2) Wysocki R, et al.  (1999) Disruption and basic phenotypic analysis of 18 novel genes from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Yeast 15(2):165-71
3) Regelmann J, et al.  (2003) Catabolite degradation of fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae: a genome-wide screen identifies eight novel GID genes and indicates the existence of two degradation pathways. Mol Biol Cell 14(4):1652-63
4) Huh WK, et al.  (2003) Global analysis of protein localization in budding yeast. Nature 425(6959):686-91