GCR2/YNL199C Literature Guide Help

Other names published for GCR2: YNL199C

GCR2 - Additional Literature (26)

ReferenceOther Genes Addressed
Short MK, et al.  (2012) The yeast magmas ortholog pam16 has an essential function in fermentative growth that involves sphingolipid metabolism. PLoS One 7(7):e39428
Albert B, et al.  (2011) RNA polymerase I-specific subunits promote polymerase clustering to enhance the rRNA gene transcription cycle. J Cell Biol 192(2):277-93
Dikicioglu D, et al.  (2011) How yeast re-programmes its transcriptional profile in response to different nutrient impulses. BMC Syst Biol 5(1):148
Miller C, et al.  (2011) Dynamic transcriptome analysis measures rates of mRNA synthesis and decay in yeast. Mol Syst Biol 7():458
Dias PJ, et al.  (2010) Insights into the mechanisms of toxicity and tolerance to the agricultural fungicide mancozeb in yeast, as suggested by a chemogenomic approach. OMICS 14(2):211-27
Fendt SM, et al.  (2010) Tradeoff between enzyme and metabolite efficiency maintains metabolic homeostasis upon perturbations in enzyme capacity. Mol Syst Biol 6():356
Fendt SM, et al.  (2010) Unraveling condition-dependent networks of transcription factors that control metabolic pathway activity in yeast. Mol Syst Biol 6():432
Goh WS, et al.  (2010) Blurring of high-resolution data shows that the effect of intrinsic nucleosome occupancy on transcription factor binding is mostly regional, not local. PLoS Comput Biol 6(1):e1000649
Mira NP, et al.  (2010) Genome-wide identification of Saccharomyces cerevisiae genes required for tolerance to acetic acid. Microb Cell Fact 9(1):79
Ruotolo R, et al.  (2010) Chemogenomic profiling of the cellular effects associated with histone H3 acetylation impairment by a quinoline-derived compound. Genomics 96(5):272-80
Zheng J, et al.  (2010) Epistatic relationships reveal the functional organization of yeast transcription factors. Mol Syst Biol 6():420
Gibson BR, et al.  (2008) Carbohydrate utilization and the lager yeast transcriptome during brewery fermentation. Yeast 25(8):549-62
Matsufuji Y, et al.  (2008) Acetaldehyde tolerance in Saccharomyces cerevisiae involves the pentose phosphate pathway and oleic acid biosynthesis. Yeast 25(11):825-33
Nyswaner KM, et al.  (2008) Chromatin-associated genes protect the yeast genome from ty1 insertional mutagenesis. Genetics 178(1):197-214
Rojas M, et al.  (2008) Selective inhibition of yeast regulons by daunorubicin: a transcriptome-wide analysis. BMC Genomics 9:358
Ward LD and Bussemaker HJ  (2008) Predicting functional transcription factor binding through alignment-free and affinity-based analysis of orthologous promoter sequences. Bioinformatics 24(13):i165-71
Chen G, et al.  (2007) Clustering of genes into regulons using integrated modeling-COGRIM. Genome Biol 8(1):R4
Freimoser FM, et al.  (2006) Systematic screening of polyphosphate (poly P) levels in yeast mutant cells reveals strong interdependence with primary metabolism. Genome Biol 7(11):R109
Rand JD and Grant CM  (2006) The thioredoxin system protects ribosomes against stress-induced aggregation. Mol Biol Cell 17(1):387-401
Yu H and Gerstein M  (2006) Genomic analysis of the hierarchical structure of regulatory networks. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 103(40):14724-31
Yu T and Li KC  (2005) Inference of transcriptional regulatory network by two-stage constrained space factor analysis. Bioinformatics 21(21):4033-8
Tong AH, et al.  (2004) Global mapping of the yeast genetic interaction network. Science 303(5659):808-13
Huang D, et al.  (2002) Dissection of a complex phenotype by functional genomics reveals roles for the yeast cyclin-dependent protein kinase Pho85 in stress adaptation and cell integrity. Mol Cell Biol 22(14):5076-88
Sato T, et al.  (1999) A human gene, hSGT1, can substitute for GCR2, which encodes a general regulatory factor of glycolytic gene expression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mol Gen Genet 260(6):535-40
Uemura H and Fraenkel DG  (1999) Glucose metabolism in gcr mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Bacteriol 181(15):4719-23
Jonniaux JL, et al.  (1994) A 21.7 kb DNA segment on the left arm of yeast chromosome XIV carries WHI3, GCR2, SPX18, SPX19, an homologue to the heat shock gene SSB1 and 8 new open reading frames of unknown function. Yeast 10(12):1639-45