Other names published for STU1: YBL034C
STU1 LITERATURE TOPICS
- Curated Literature
- Additional Literature
- All Curated References
- Primary Literature
- Reviews
- Genetics/Cell Biology
- Nucleic Acid Information
- Gene Product Information
- Related Genes/Proteins
- Research Aids
- Genome-wide Analysis
- Additional Information
STU1 - Additional Literature (11)
| Reference | Other Genes Addressed |
|---|---|
| McIntosh JR, et al. (2013) Conserved and divergent features of kinetochores and spindle microtubule ends from five species. J Cell Biol 200(4):459-74 | |
| Jones MH, et al. (2011) Cell cycle phosphorylation of mitotic exit network (MEN) proteins. Cell Cycle 10(20):3435-40 | |
| Swayne TC, et al. (2009) Live-cell imaging of the cytoskeleton and mitochondrial-cytoskeletal interactions in budding yeast. Methods Mol Biol 586:41-68 | |
| Amaro IA, et al. (2008) The Saccharomyces cerevisiae Homolog of p24 Is Essential for Maintaining the Association of p150Glued With the Dynactin Complex. Genetics 178(2):703-9 | |
| Banuett F, et al. (2008) The machinery for cell polarity, cell morphogenesis, and the cytoskeleton in the Basidiomycete fungus Ustilago maydis-a survey of the genome sequence. Fungal Genet Biol 45 Suppl 1:S3-S14 | |
| Pereira AL, et al. (2006) Mammalian CLASP1 and CLASP2 cooperate to ensure mitotic fidelity by regulating spindle and kinetochore function. Mol Biol Cell 17(10):4526-42 | |
| Davierwala AP, et al. (2005) The synthetic genetic interaction spectrum of essential genes. Nat Genet 37(10):1147-52 | |
| Lemos CL, et al. (2000) Mast, a conserved microtubule-associated protein required for bipolar mitotic spindle organization. EMBO J 19(14):3668-82 | |
| Jones MH, et al. (1999) Yeast Dam1p is required to maintain spindle integrity during mitosis and interacts with the Mps1p kinase. Mol Biol Cell 10(7):2377-91 | |
| Feldmann H, et al. (1994) Complete DNA sequence of yeast chromosome II. EMBO J 13(24):5795-809 | |
| Skala J, et al. (1994) The sequence of an 8.8 kb segment on the left arm of chromosome II from Saccharomyces cerevisiae reveals four new open reading frames including homologs of animal DNA polymerase alpha-primases and bacterial GTP cyclohydrolase II. Yeast 10 Suppl A:S13-24 |




