YIL080W Literature Guide Help

YIL080W - Primary Literature (12)

ReferenceOther Genes Addressed
Carr M, et al.  (2012) Evolutionary genomics of transposable elements in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. PLoS One 7(11):e50978
Zhang M, et al.  (2010) Two-hybrid analysis of Ty3 capsid subdomain interactions. Mob DNA 1(1):14
Beliakova-Bethell N, et al.  (2009) Ty3 nuclear entry is initiated by viruslike particle docking on GLFG nucleoporins. J Virol 83(22):11914-25
Sankar Ray Ast S, et al.  (2009) Combining multisource information through functional-annotation-based weighting: gene function prediction in yeast. IEEE Trans Biomed Eng 56(2):229-36
Kuznetsov YG, et al.  (2005) Investigation by atomic force microscopy of the structure of Ty3 retrotransposon particles. J Virol 79(13):8032-45
Lener D, et al.  (2002) Mutating conserved residues in the ribonuclease H domain of Ty3 reverse transcriptase affects specialized cleavage events. J Biol Chem 277(29):26486-95
Nymark-McMahon MH, et al.  (2002) Ty3 integrase is required for initiation of reverse transcription. J Virol 76(6):2804-16
Aye M, et al.  (2001) A truncation mutant of the 95-kilodalton subunit of transcription factor IIIC reveals asymmetry in Ty3 integration. Mol Cell Biol 21(22):7839-51
Lin SS, et al.  (2001) Integrase mediates nuclear localization of Ty3. Mol Cell Biol 21(22):7826-38
Kenna MA, et al.  (1998) Invading the yeast nucleus: a nuclear localization signal at the C terminus of Ty1 integrase is required for transposition in vivo. Mol Cell Biol 18(2):1115-24
Kim JM, et al.  (1998) Transposable elements and genome organization: a comprehensive survey of retrotransposons revealed by the complete Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome sequence. Genome Res 8(5):464-78
Kirchner J and Sandmeyer S  (1993) Proteolytic processing of Ty3 proteins is required for transposition. J Virol 67(1):19-28