SAM4/YPL273W Literature Guide Help

Other names published for SAM4: YPL273W

SAM4 - Additional Literature (15)

ReferenceOther Genes Addressed
Babrzadeh F, et al.  (2012) Whole-genome sequencing of the efficient industrial fuel-ethanol fermentative Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain CAT-1. Mol Genet Genomics 287(6):485-94
Hornung G, et al.  (2012) Noise-mean relationship in mutated promoters. Genome Res 22(12):2409-17
Hornung G, et al.  (2012) Nucleosome organization affects the sensitivity of gene expression to promoter mutations. Mol Cell 46(3):362-8
Hebert A, et al.  (2011) Biodiversity in sulfur metabolism in hemiascomycetous yeasts. FEMS Yeast Res 11(4):366-78
Wlodarski T, et al.  (2011) Comprehensive Structural and Substrate Specificity Classification of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Methyltransferome. PLoS One 6(8):e23168
Li BZ, et al.  (2010) Transcriptome analysis of differential responses of diploid and haploid yeast to ethanol stress. J Biotechnol 148(4):194-203
Marino SM, et al.  (2010) Characterization of Surface-Exposed Reactive Cysteine Residues in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Biochemistry 49(35):7709-21
Argueso JL, et al.  (2009) Genome structure of a Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain widely used in bioethanol production. Genome Res 19(12):2258-70
Katju V, et al.  (2009) Variation in gene duplicates with low synonymous divergence in Saccharomyces cerevisiae relative to Caenorhabditis elegans. Genome Biol 10(7):R75
Woo DK, et al.  (2009) Multiple pathways of mitochondrial-nuclear communication in yeast: Intergenomic signaling involves ABF1 and affects a different set of genes than retrograde regulation. Biochim Biophys Acta 1789(2):135-45
Yiu G, et al.  (2008) Pathways change in expression during replicative aging in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci 63(1):21-34
Kim I, et al.  (2007) Comparative proteomic analyses of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae KNU5377 strain against menadione-induced oxidative stress. J Microbiol Biotechnol 17(2):207-17
Lopez-Villar E, et al.  (2006) Genetic and proteomic evidences support the localization of yeast enolase in the cell surface. Proteomics 6 Suppl 1:S107-18
Haugen AC, et al.  (2004) Integrating phenotypic and expression profiles to map arsenic-response networks. Genome Biol 5(12):R95
Huh WK, et al.  (2003) Global analysis of protein localization in budding yeast. Nature 425(6959):686-91