PRE6/YOL038W Literature Guide Help

Other names published for PRE6: YOL038W

PRE6 - Non-Fungal Related Genes/Proteins (10)

ReferenceOther Genes Addressed
Baugh JM, et al.  (2009) Proteasomes can degrade a significant proportion of cellular proteins independent of ubiquitination. J Mol Biol 386(3):814-27
Bech-Otschir D, et al.  (2009) Polyubiquitin substrates allosterically activate their own degradation by the 26S proteasome. Nat Struct Mol Biol 16(2):219-25
Prakash S, et al.  (2009) Substrate selection by the proteasome during degradation of protein complexes. Nat Chem Biol 5(1):29-36
Forster A, et al.  (2003) The pore of activated 20S proteasomes has an ordered 7-fold symmetric conformation. EMBO J 22(17):4356-64
Dahlmann B, et al.  (1999) Identical subunit topographies of human and yeast 20S proteasomes. Arch Biochem Biophys 363(2):296-300
Chervitz SA, et al.  (1998) Comparison of the complete protein sets of worm and yeast: orthology and divergence. Science 282(5396):2022-8
Fu H, et al.  (1998) Molecular organization of the 20S proteasome gene family from Arabidopsis thaliana. Genetics 149(2):677-92
Niedermann G, et al.  (1997) Potential immunocompetence of proteolytic fragments produced by proteasomes before evolution of the vertebrate immune system. J Exp Med 186(2):209-20
Maupin-Furlow JA and Ferry JG  (1995) A proteasome from the methanogenic archaeon Methanosarcina thermophila. J Biol Chem 270(48):28617-22
Heinemeyer W, et al.  (1994) PRE5 and PRE6, the last missing genes encoding 20S proteasome subunits from yeast? Indication for a set of 14 different subunits in the eukaryotic proteasome core. Biochemistry 33(40):12229-37