STE6/YKL209C Literature Guide Help

Other names published for STE6: ATP-binding cassette alpha-factor transporter STE6, YKL209C

STE6 - DNA/RNA Sequence Features (12)

ReferenceOther Genes Addressed
Ioshikhes IP, et al.  (2006) Nucleosome positions predicted through comparative genomics. Nat Genet 38(10):1210-5
Ghosh MK, et al.  (2005) Targeted activation of transcription in vivo through hairpin-triplex forming oligonucleotide in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mol Cell Biochem 278(1-2):147-55
Galgoczy DJ, et al.  (2004) Genomic dissection of the cell-type-specification circuit in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 101(52):18069-74
Simms TA, et al.  (2004) The Saccharomyces cerevisiae TRT2 tRNAThr gene upstream of STE6 is a barrier to repression in MATalpha cells and exerts a potential tRNA position effect in MATa cells. Nucleic Acids Res 32(17):5206-13
Saito S, et al.  (2002) The role of nucleosome positioning in repression by the yeast alpha 2/Mcm1p repressor. Nucleic Acids Res Suppl(2):93-4
Wang X and Simpson RT  (2001) Chromatin structure mapping in Saccharomyces cerevisiae in vivo with DNase I. Nucleic Acids Res 29(9):1943-50
Ducker CE and Simpson RT  (2000) The organized chromatin domain of the repressed yeast a cell-specific gene STE6 contains two molecules of the corepressor Tup1p per nucleosome. EMBO J 19(3):400-9
Zhong H and Vershon AK  (1997) The yeast homeodomain protein MATalpha2 shows extended DNA binding specificity in complex with Mcm1. J Biol Chem 272(13):8402-9
Elia L and Marsh L  (1996) Role of the ABC transporter Ste6 in cell fusion during yeast conjugation. J Cell Biol 135(3):741-51
Fearon K, et al.  (1994) Premature translation termination mutations are efficiently suppressed in a highly conserved region of yeast Ste6p, a member of the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter family. J Biol Chem 269(27):17802-8
Patterton HG and Simpson RT  (1994) Nucleosomal location of the STE6 TATA box and Mat alpha 2p-mediated repression. Mol Cell Biol 14(6):4002-10
Kuchler K, et al.  (1989) Saccharomyces cerevisiae STE6 gene product: a novel pathway for protein export in eukaryotic cells. EMBO J 8(13):3973-84