Other names published for HHF1: YBR009C
HHF1 LITERATURE TOPICS
- Curated Literature
- Genetics/Cell Biology
- Nucleic Acid Information
- Gene Product Information
- Related Genes/Proteins
- Cross-species Expression
- Fungal Related Genes/Proteins
- Non-Fungal Related Genes/Proteins
- Research Aids
- Genome-wide Analysis
- Proteome-wide Analysis
- Other Topics
- Additional Information
HHF1 - Non-Fungal Related Genes/Proteins (18)
| Reference | Other Genes Addressed |
|---|---|
| Fernandez MA, et al. (2012) Identification of a core set of signature cell cycle genes whose relative order of time to peak expression is conserved across species. Nucleic Acids Res 40(7):2823-32 | |
| Liu WH, et al. (2012) CAF-1-induced oligomerization of histones H3/H4 and mutually exclusive interactions with Asf1 guide H3/H4 transitions among histone chaperones and DNA. Nucleic Acids Res 40(22):11229-39 | |
| Armache KJ, et al. (2011) Structural basis of silencing: Sir3 BAH domain in complex with a nucleosome at 3.0 A resolution. Science 334(6058):977-82 | |
| Donham DC 2nd, et al. (2011) The activity of the histone chaperone yeast Asf1 in the assembly and disassembly of histone H3/H4-DNA complexes. Nucleic Acids Res 39(13):5449-58 | |
| On T, et al. (2010) The evolutionary landscape of the chromatin modification machinery reveals lineage specific gains, expansions, and losses. Proteins 78(9):2075-89 | |
| Kim J and Roeder RG (2009) Direct Bre1-Paf1 Complex Interactions and RING Finger-independent Bre1-Rad6 Interactions Mediate Histone H2B Ubiquitylation in Yeast. J Biol Chem 284(31):20582-92 | |
| Luijsterburg MS, et al. (2008) The major architects of chromatin: architectural proteins in bacteria, archaea and eukaryotes. Crit Rev Biochem Mol Biol 43(6):393-418 | |
| Garcia BA, et al. (2007) Organismal differences in post-translational modifications in histones H3 and H4. J Biol Chem 282(10):7641-55 | |
| Krishnamoorthy T, et al. (2006) Phosphorylation of histone H4 Ser1 regulates sporulation in yeast and is conserved in fly and mouse spermatogenesis. Genes Dev 20(18):2580-92 | |
| Marino-Ramirez L, et al. (2006) Multiple independent evolutionary solutions to core histone gene regulation. Genome Biol 7(12):R122 | |
| Dyczkowski J and Vingron M (2005) Comparative analysis of cell cycle regulated genes in eukaryotes. Genome Inform 16(1):125-31 | |
| Silverman BD (2005) The hydrophobicity of the H3 histone fold differs from the hydrophobicity of the other three folds. J Mol Evol 60(3):354-64 | |
| Green GR (2001) Phosphorylation of histone variant regions in chromatin: unlocking the linker? Biochem Cell Biol 79(3):275-87 | |
| Broday L, et al. (2000) Nickel compounds are novel inhibitors of histone H4 acetylation. Cancer Res 60(2):238-41 | |
| Shibahara K, et al. (2000) The N-terminal domains of histones H3 and H4 are not necessary for chromatin assembly factor-1- mediated nucleosome assembly onto replicated DNA in vitro. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 97(14):7766-71 | |
| McQuibban GA, et al. (1998) Assembly, remodeling, and histone binding capabilities of yeast nucleosome assembly protein 1. J Biol Chem 273(11):6582-90 | |
| Smith MM and Andresson OS (1983) DNA sequences of yeast H3 and H4 histone genes from two non-allelic gene sets encode identical H3 and H4 proteins. J Mol Biol 169(3):663-90 | |
| Smith MM and Murray K (1983) Yeast H3 and H4 histone messenger RNAs are transcribed from two non-allelic gene sets. J Mol Biol 169(3):641-61 |



