NRP1/YDL167C Literature Guide Help

Other names published for NRP1: YDL167C

NRP1 - Additional Literature (15)

ReferenceOther Genes Addressed
Arnone JT, et al.  (2012) The adjacent positioning of co-regulated gene pairs is widely conserved across eukaryotes. BMC Genomics 13(1):546
Winkler J, et al.  (2012) Hsp70 targets Hsp100 chaperones to substrates for protein disaggregation and prion fragmentation. J Cell Biol 198(3):387-404
Henry TC, et al.  (2011) Systematic Screen of Schizosaccharomyces pombe Deletion Collection Uncovers Parallel Evolution of the Phosphate Signal Transduction Pathway in Yeasts. Eukaryot Cell 10(2):198-206
Mittal N, et al.  (2011) Interplay between posttranscriptional and posttranslational interactions of RNA-binding proteins. J Mol Biol 409(3):466-79
Ohtsuki K, et al.  (2010) Genome-wide localization analysis of a complete set of Tafs reveals a specific effect of the taf1 mutation on Taf2 occupancy and provides indirect evidence for different TFIID conformations at different promoters. Nucleic Acids Res 38(6):1805-20
Alberti S, et al.  (2009) A systematic survey identifies prions and illuminates sequence features of prionogenic proteins. Cell 137(1):146-58
de Graaf B, et al.  (2009) Cellular pathways for DNA repair and damage tolerance of formaldehyde-induced DNA-protein crosslinks. DNA Repair (Amst) 8(10):1207-14
Hogan DJ, et al.  (2008) Diverse RNA-binding proteins interact with functionally related sets of RNAs, suggesting an extensive regulatory system. PLoS Biol 6(10):e255
Shima J, et al.  (2008) Possible roles of vacuolar H(+)-ATPase and mitochondrial function in tolerance to air-drying stress revealed by genome-wide screening of Saccharomyces cerevisiae deletion strains. Yeast 25(3):179-90
Nariai N, et al.  (2007) Probabilistic protein function prediction from heterogeneous genome-wide data. PLoS One 2(3):e337
Gruhler A, et al.  (2005) Quantitative phosphoproteomics applied to the yeast pheromone signaling pathway. Mol Cell Proteomics 4(3):310-27
Outten CE, et al.  (2005) Cellular factors required for protection from hyperoxia toxicity in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Biochem J 388(Pt 1):93-101
van Bakel H, et al.  (2005) Gene expression profiling and phenotype analyses of S. cerevisiae in response to changing copper reveals six genes with new roles in copper and iron metabolism. Physiol Genomics 22(3):356-67
Huh WK, et al.  (2003) Global analysis of protein localization in budding yeast. Nature 425(6959):686-91
de Groot PW, et al.  (2001) A genomic approach for the identification and classification of genes involved in cell wall formation and its regulation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Comp Funct Genomics 2(3):124-42