IZH4/YOL101C Literature Guide Help

Other names published for IZH4: YOL101C

IZH4 - Additional Literature (10)

ReferenceOther Genes Addressed
Karpichev IV, et al.  (2008) Binding characteristics and regulatory mechanisms of the transcription factors controlling oleate-responsive genes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Biol Chem 283(16):10264-75
Tai SL, et al.  (2007) Correlation between transcript profiles and fitness of deletion mutants in anaerobic chemostat cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Microbiology 153(Pt 3):877-86
Lai LC, et al.  (2005) Dynamical remodeling of the transcriptome during short-term anaerobiosis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae: differential response and role of Msn2 and/or Msn4 and other factors in galactose and glucose media. Mol Cell Biol 25(10):4075-91
Millson SH, et al.  (2005) A two-hybrid screen of the yeast proteome for Hsp90 interactors uncovers a novel Hsp90 chaperone requirement in the activity of a stress-activated mitogen-activated protein kinase, Slt2p (Mpk1p). Eukaryot Cell 4(5):849-60
Boer VM, et al.  (2003) The genome-wide transcriptional responses of Saccharomyces cerevisiae grown on glucose in aerobic chemostat cultures limited for carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, or sulfur. J Biol Chem 278(5):3265-74
Kim H, et al.  (2003) Topology models for 37 Saccharomyces cerevisiae membrane proteins based on C-terminal reporter fusions and predictions. J Biol Chem 278(12):10208-13
Epstein CB, et al.  (2001) Genome-wide responses to mitochondrial dysfunction. Mol Biol Cell 12(2):297-308
Zhang CT and Wang J  (2000) Recognition of protein coding genes in the yeast genome at better than 95% accuracy based on the Z curve. Nucleic Acids Res 28(14):2804-14
Rieger KJ, et al.  (1999) Chemotyping of yeast mutants using robotics. Yeast 15(10B):973-86
Wendland B and Emr SD  (1998) Pan1p, yeast eps15, functions as a multivalent adaptor that coordinates protein-protein interactions essential for endocytosis. J Cell Biol 141(1):71-84