- Summary
- Locus History
- Literature
- Gene Ontology
- Phenotype
- Interactions
- Expression
- Protein
- Wiki
| Nomenclature History | |
|---|---|
| Standard Name | Reference |
| UBP3 | Baker RT, et al. (1992) Ubiquitin-specific proteases of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Cloning of UBP2 and UBP3, and functional analysis of the UBP gene family. J Biol Chem 267(32):23364-75 |
| Other Name(s) | Reference |
|---|---|
| BLM3 | McCullock S, et al. (2006) blm3-1 Is an Allele of UBP3, a Ubiquitin Protease that Appears to Act During Transcription of Damaged DNA. J Mol Biol 363(3):660-72 |
| Nomenclature History Notes | |
|---|---|
| Date | Note |
| 2005-09-27 | The name BLM3, originally referring to a genetic locus, has also been associated with YFL007W (now called BLM10) due to an error in cloning. It was later determined that blm3-1 is an allele of UBP3/YER151C. |
| Doherty K, et al. (2004) Expression of the expanded YFL007w ORF and assignment of the gene name BLM10. Yeast 21(12):1021-3 | |
| McCullock S, et al. (2006) blm3-1 Is an Allele of UBP3, a Ubiquitin Protease that Appears to Act During Transcription of Damaged DNA. J Mol Biol 363(3):660-72 | |
| Other Notes | |
|---|---|
| Date | Note |
| 2008-07-23 | blm3-1 is a nonsense mutation in the ubiquitin protease gene UBP3. A1075T leads to a premature stop after residue I358 (K359 becomes a stop codon). |
| McCullock S, et al. (2006) blm3-1 Is an Allele of UBP3, a Ubiquitin Protease that Appears to Act During Transcription of Damaged DNA. J Mol Biol 363(3):660-72 | |



