RPL39/YJL189W Literature Guide Help

Other names published for RPL39: PUB2, RPL46, SPB2, L39, L46, YL40, L39e, ribosomal 60S subunit protein L39, YJL189W

RPL39 - Regulation of (10)

ReferenceOther Genes Addressed
Parenteau J, et al.  (2011) Introns within Ribosomal Protein Genes Regulate the Production and Function of Yeast Ribosomes. Cell 147(2):320-31
Zeevi D, et al.  (2011) Compensation for differences in gene copy number among yeast ribosomal proteins is encoded within their promoters. Genome Res 21(12):2114-28
Hu J, et al.  (2010) Analysis of transcriptional synergy between upstream regions and introns in ribosomal protein genes of yeast. Comput Biol Chem 34(2):106-14
Kraft C, et al.  (2008) Mature ribosomes are selectively degraded upon starvation by an autophagy pathway requiring the Ubp3p/Bre5p ubiquitin protease. Nat Cell Biol 10(5):602-10
Sayani S, et al.  (2008) Widespread impact of nonsense-mediated mRNA decay on the yeast intronome. Mol Cell 31(3):360-70
Zhang J, et al.  (2008) Characteristic differences between the promoters of intron-containing and intronless ribosomal protein genes in yeast. BMC Res Notes 1(1):109
Swaminathan S, et al.  (2006) Rck2 is required for reprogramming of ribosomes during oxidative stress. Mol Biol Cell 17(3):1472-82
Zhao Y, et al.  (2006) Fine-structure analysis of ribosomal protein gene transcription. Mol Cell Biol 26(13):4853-62
Lascaris RF, et al.  (1999) DNA-binding requirements of the yeast protein Rap1p as selected in silico from ribosomal protein gene promoter sequences. Bioinformatics 15(4):267-77
Kraakman LS, et al.  (1989) The divergently transcribed genes encoding yeast ribosomal proteins L46 and S24 are activated by shared RPG-boxes. Nucleic Acids Res 17(23):9693-706