Other names published for CCR4: FUN27, NUT21, YAL021C
CCR4 LITERATURE TOPICS
- Curated Literature
- Genetics/Cell Biology
- Nucleic Acid Information
- Gene Product Information
- Related Genes/Proteins
- Research Aids
- Genome-wide Analysis
- Proteome-wide Analysis
- Other Topics
- Additional Information
CCR4 - Protein Sequence Features (11)
| Reference | Other Genes Addressed |
|---|---|
| Basquin J, et al. (2012) Architecture of the nuclease module of the yeast Ccr4-not complex: the Not1-Caf1-Ccr4 interaction. Mol Cell 48(2):207-18 | |
| Reijns MA, et al. (2008) A role for Q/N-rich aggregation-prone regions in P-body localization. J Cell Sci 121(Pt 15):2463-72 | |
| Woolstencroft RN, et al. (2006) Ccr4 contributes to tolerance of replication stress through control of CRT1 mRNA poly(A) tail length. J Cell Sci 119(Pt 24):5178-92 | |
| Morris JZ, et al. (2005) twin, a CCR4 homolog, regulates cyclin poly(A) tail length to permit Drosophila oogenesis. Development 132(6):1165-74 | |
| Traven A, et al. (2005) Ccr4-not complex mRNA deadenylase activity contributes to DNA damage responses in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Genetics 169(1):65-75 | |
| Clark LB, et al. (2004) Systematic mutagenesis of the leucine-rich repeat (LRR) domain of CCR4 reveals specific sites for binding to CAF1 and a separate critical role for the LRR in CCR4 deadenylase activity. J Biol Chem 279(14):13616-23 | |
| Chen J, et al. (2002) CCR4, a 3'-5' poly(A) RNA and ssDNA exonuclease, is the catalytic component of the cytoplasmic deadenylase. EMBO J 21(6):1414-26 | |
| Faber AW, et al. (2002) Ngl2p is a Ccr4p-like RNA nuclease essential for the final step in 3'-end processing of 5.8S rRNA in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. RNA 8(9):1095-101 | |
| Dupressoir A, et al. (2001) Identification of four families of yCCR4- and Mg2+-dependent endonuclease-related proteins in higher eukaryotes, and characterization of orthologs of yCCR4 with a conserved leucine-rich repeat essential for hCAF1/hPOP2 binding. BMC Genomics 2(1):9 | |
| Draper MP, et al. (1994) CCR4 is a glucose-regulated transcription factor whose leucine-rich repeat binds several proteins important for placing CCR4 in its proper promoter context. Mol Cell Biol 14(7):4522-31 | |
| Malvar T, et al. (1992) The CCR4 protein from Saccharomyces cerevisiae contains a leucine-rich repeat region which is required for its control of ADH2 gene expression. Genetics 132(4):951-62 |



