TUB4/YLR212C Literature Guide Help

Other names published for TUB4: YLR212C

TUB4 - Cellular Location (16)

ReferenceOther Genes Addressed
Bergman ZJ, et al.  (2012) Constitutive dynein activity in She1 mutants reveals differences in microtubule attachment at the yeast spindle pole body. Mol Biol Cell 23(12):2319-26
Erlemann S, et al.  (2012) An extended gamma-tubulin ring functions as a stable platform in microtubule nucleation. J Cell Biol 197(1):59-74
Keck JM, et al.  (2011) A cell cycle phosphoproteome of the yeast centrosome. Science 332(6037):1557-61
Kollman JM, et al.  (2010) Microtubule nucleating gamma-TuSC assembles structures with 13-fold microtubule-like symmetry. Nature 466(7308):879-82
Cuschieri L, et al.  (2006) {gamma}-Tubulin Is Required for Proper Recruitment and Assembly of Kar9-Bim1 Complexes in Budding Yeast. Mol Biol Cell 17(10):4420-34
Vinh DB, et al.  (2002) Reconstitution and characterization of budding yeast gamma-tubulin complex. Mol Biol Cell 13(4):1144-57
Drawid A and Gerstein M  (2000) A Bayesian system integrating expression data with sequence patterns for localizing proteins: comprehensive application to the yeast genome. J Mol Biol 301(4):1059-75
Adams IR and Kilmartin JV  (1999) Localization of core spindle pole body (SPB) components during SPB duplication in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Cell Biol 145(4):809-23
O'Toole ET, et al.  (1999) High-voltage electron tomography of spindle pole bodies and early mitotic spindles in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mol Biol Cell 10(6):2017-31
Knop M and Schiebel E  (1998) Receptors determine the cellular localization of a gamma-tubulin complex and thereby the site of microtubule formation. EMBO J 17(14):3952-67
Pereira G, et al.  (1998) Spc98p directs the yeast gamma-tubulin complex into the nucleus and is subject to cell cycle-dependent phosphorylation on the nuclear side of the spindle pole body. Mol Biol Cell 9(4):775-93
Knop M and Schiebel E  (1997) Spc98p and Spc97p of the yeast gamma-tubulin complex mediate binding to the spindle pole body via their interaction with Spc110p. EMBO J 16(23):6985-95
Marschall LG, et al.  (1996) Analysis of Tub4p, a yeast gamma-tubulin-like protein: implications for microtubule-organizing center function. J Cell Biol 134(2):443-54
Sobel SG and Snyder M  (1995) A highly divergent gamma-tubulin gene is essential for cell growth and proper microtubule organization in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Cell Biol 131(6 Pt 2):1775-88
Rout MP and Kilmartin JV  (1991) Yeast spindle pole body components. Cold Spring Harb Symp Quant Biol 56:687-92
Peterson JB, et al.  (1972) Meiotic spindle plaques in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Cell Biol 53(3):837-41