ATG23/YLR431C Literature Guide Help

Other names published for ATG23: CVT23, YLR431C

ATG23 - Additional Literature (11)

ReferenceOther Genes Addressed
Yamamoto H, et al.  (2012) Atg9 vesicles are an important membrane source during early steps of autophagosome formation. J Cell Biol 198(2):219-33
Munakata N and Klionsky DJ  (2010) "Autophagy suite": Atg9 cycling in the cytoplasm to vacuole targeting pathway. Autophagy 6(6):679-85
Cao Y, et al.  (2009) A multiple ATG gene knockout strain for yeast two-hybrid analysis. Autophagy 5(5):699-705
Godefroy N, et al.  (2009) Identification of autophagy genes in Ciona intestinalis: A new experimental model to study autophagy mechanism. Autophagy 5(6):805-15
Rigden DJ, et al.  (2009) Autophagy in protists: Examples of secondary loss, lineage-specific innovations, and the conundrum of remodeling a single mitochondrion. Autophagy 5(6):784-94
Cao Y and Klionsky DJ  (2008) New insights into autophagy using a multiple knockout strain. Autophagy 4(8):1073-5
Krick R, et al.  (2008) Piecemeal microautophagy of the nucleus requires the core macroautophagy genes. Mol Biol Cell 19(10):4492-505
Meijer WH, et al.  (2007) ATG genes involved in non-selective autophagy are conserved from yeast to man, but the selective Cvt and pexophagy pathways also require organism-specific genes. Autophagy 3(2):106-16
He C, et al.  (2006) Recruitment of Atg9 to the preautophagosomal structure by Atg11 is essential for selective autophagy in budding yeast. J Cell Biol 175(6):925-35
Reggiori F, et al.  (2004) The Atg1-Atg13 complex regulates Atg9 and Atg23 retrieval transport from the pre-autophagosomal structure. Dev Cell 6(1):79-90
Klionsky DJ, et al.  (2003) A unified nomenclature for yeast autophagy-related genes. Dev Cell 5(4):539-45