HIS5/YIL116W Literature Guide Help

Other names published for HIS5: histidinol-phosphate transaminase, YIL116W

HIS5 Literature Curation Summary

Curated References for HIS5: 43

Date of last curation: 2013-01-28

ReferenceOther Genes Addressed
Llopis S, et al.  (2012) Transcriptomics in human blood incubation reveals the importance of oxidative stress response in Saccharomyces cerevisiae clinical strains. BMC Genomics 13(1):419
Massoni A, et al.  (2012) Proteome analysis of a CTR9 deficient yeast strain suggests that Ctr9 has function(s) independent of the Paf1 complex. Biochim Biophys Acta 1824(5):759-68
Wang S, et al.  (2012) Comparative analyses of cytotoxicity and molecular mechanisms between platinum metallointercalators and cisplatin. Metallomics 4(9):950-9
Marino SM, et al.  (2010) Characterization of Surface-Exposed Reactive Cysteine Residues in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Biochemistry 49(35):7709-21
Pinson B, et al.  (2009) Metabolic intermediates selectively stimulate transcription factor interaction and modulate phosphate and purine pathways. Genes Dev 23(12):1399-407
Vachova L, et al.  (2009) Metabolic diversification of cells during the development of yeast colonies. Environ Microbiol 11(2):494-504
Shirra MK, et al.  (2008) A Chemical Genomics Study Identifies Snf1 as a Repressor of GCN4 Translation. J Biol Chem 283(51):35889-98
Lu P, et al.  (2007) Global metabolic changes following loss of a feedback loop reveal dynamic steady states of the yeast metabolome. Metab Eng 9(1):8-20
Tanaka F, et al.  (2006) Functional genomic analysis of commercial baker's yeast during initial stages of model dough-fermentation. Food Microbiol 23(8):717-28
Gu W, et al.  (2005) Depletion of Saccharomyces cerevisiae tRNA(His) guanylyltransferase Thg1p leads to uncharged tRNAHis with additional m(5)C. Mol Cell Biol 25(18):8191-201
Kus B, et al.  (2005) A high throughput screen to identify substrates for the ubiquitin ligase Rsp5. J Biol Chem 280(33):29470-8
Nett JH, et al.  (2005) Cloning and disruption of the Pichia pastoris ARG1, ARG2, ARG3, HIS1, HIS2, HIS5, HIS6 genes and their use as auxotrophic markers. Yeast 22(4):295-304
Zhang W, et al.  (2003) Microarray analyses of the metabolic responses of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to organic solvent dimethyl sulfoxide. J Ind Microbiol Biotechnol 30(1):57-69
Harashima S and Kaneko Y  (2001) Application of the PHO5-gene-fusion technology to molecular genetics and biotechnology in yeast. J Biosci Bioeng 91(4):325-38
Tran HG, et al.  (2000) The chromo domain protein chd1p from budding yeast is an ATP-dependent chromatin-modifying factor. EMBO J 19(10):2323-31
Chand-Goyal T, et al.  (1999) Transformation of Candida oleophila and survival of a transformant on orange fruit under field conditions. Curr Genet 35(1):51-7
Jelinsky SA and Samson LD  (1999) Global response of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to an alkylating agent. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 96(4):1486-91
Pearce DA and Sherman F  (1999) Toxicity of copper, cobalt, and nickel salts is dependent on histidine metabolism in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Bacteriol 181(16):4774-9
Denis V, et al.  (1998) Role of the myb-like protein bas1p in Saccharomyces cerevisiae: a proteome analysis. Mol Microbiol 30(3):557-66
El Malki F, et al.  (1998) Molecular cloning and expression of a cDNA sequence encoding histidinol phosphate aminotransferase from Nicotiana tabacum. Plant Mol Biol 37(6):1013-22
Alifano P, et al.  (1996) Histidine biosynthetic pathway and genes: structure, regulation, and evolution. Microbiol Rev 60(1):44-69
Cottarel G  (1995) The Saccharomyces cerevisiae HIS3 and LYS2 genes complement the Schizosaccharomyces pombe his5-303 and lys1-131 mutations, respectively: new selectable markers and new multi-purpose multicopy shuttle vectors, pSP3 and pSP4. Curr Genet 28(4):380-3
Erickson FL and Hannig EM  (1995) Characterization of Schizosaccharomyces pombe his1 and his5 cDNAs. Yeast 11(2):157-67
Harashima S, et al.  (1995) Mutations causing high basal level transcription that is independent of transcriptional activators but dependent on chromosomal position in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mol Gen Genet 247(6):716-25
Kozhina T, et al.  (1995) UVS112--A gene involved in excision repair of yeast. Yeast 11(12):1129-38
Lambrechts MG, et al.  (1995) The S1, S2 and SGA1 ancestral genes for the STA glucoamylase genes all map to chromosome IX in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Yeast 11(8):783-7
Burke JD and Gould KL  (1994) Molecular cloning and characterization of the Schizosaccharomyces pombe his3 gene for use as a selectable marker. Mol Gen Genet 242(2):169-76
Mehta PK, et al.  (1993) Aminotransferases: demonstration of homology and division into evolutionary subgroups. Eur J Biochem 214(2):549-61
Ohkuma M, et al.  (1993) Cloning of the C-URA3 gene and construction of a triple auxotroph (his5, ade1, ura3) as a useful host for the genetic engineering of Candida maltosa. Curr Genet 23(3):205-10
Hinnebusch A  (1992) "General and Pathway-specific Regulatory Mechanisms Controlling the Synthesis of Amino Acid Biosynthetic Enzymes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae". Pp. 319-414 in The Molecular and Cellular Biology of the Yeast Saccharomyces: Gene Expression, edited by Jones EW, Pringle JR and Broach JR. Cold Spring Harbor, NY: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press