Other names published for SHU1: YHL006C
SHU1 LITERATURE TOPICS
- Curated Literature
- Genetics/Cell Biology
- Gene Product Information
- Research Aids
- Strains/Constructs
- Genome-wide Analysis
- Additional Information
SHU1 - Strains/Constructs (15)
| Reference | Other Genes Addressed |
|---|---|
| Chernenkov AIu, et al. (2012) [Interaction of the HSM3 gene with genes initiating homologous recombination repair in yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae]. Genetika 48(3):333-9 | |
| She Z, et al. (2012) Structural and SAXS analysis of the budding yeast SHU-complex proteins. FEBS Lett 586(16):2306-12 | |
| Bernstein KA, et al. (2011) The Shu complex, which contains Rad51 paralogues, promotes DNA repair through inhibition of the Srs2 anti-recombinase. Mol Biol Cell 22(9):1599-607 | |
| Ii M, et al. (2011) Epistasis analysis between homologous recombination genes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae identifies multiple repair pathways for Sgs1, Mus81-Mms4 and RNase H2. Mutat Res 714(1-2):33-43 | |
| Choi K, et al. (2010) The Smc5/6 complex and Esc2 influence multiple replication-associated recombination processes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mol Biol Cell 21(13):2306-14 | |
| Ball LG, et al. (2009) The yeast Shu complex couples error-free post-replication repair to homologous recombination. Mol Microbiol 73(1):89-102 | |
| Mankouri HW, et al. (2009) Esc2 and Sgs1 act in functionally distinct branches of the homologous recombination repair pathway in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mol Biol Cell 20(6):1683-94 | |
| Yu L, et al. (2008) Chemical-genetic profiling of imidazo[1,2-a]pyridines and -pyrimidines reveals target pathways conserved between yeast and human cells. PLoS Genet 4(11):e1000284 | |
| Mankouri HW, et al. (2007) Shu proteins promote the formation of homologous recombination intermediates that are processed by sgs1-rmi1-top3. Mol Biol Cell 18(10):4062-73 | |
| St Onge RP, et al. (2007) Systematic pathway analysis using high-resolution fitness profiling of combinatorial gene deletions. Nat Genet 39(2):199-206 | |
| Suter B, et al. (2007) Examining protein protein interactions using endogenously tagged yeast arrays: The Cross-and-Capture system. Genome Res 17(12):1774-82 | |
| Lee W, et al. (2005) Genome-wide requirements for resistance to functionally distinct DNA-damaging agents. PLoS Genet 1(2):e24 | |
| Shor E, et al. (2005) A genetic screen for top3 suppressors in Saccharomyces cerevisiae identifies SHU1, SHU2, PSY3 and CSM2: four genes involved in error-free DNA repair. Genetics 169(3):1275-89 | |
| Huang ME, et al. (2003) A genomewide screen in Saccharomyces cerevisiae for genes that suppress the accumulation of mutations. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 100(20):11529-34 | |
| Begley TJ, et al. (2002) Damage recovery pathways in Saccharomyces cerevisiae revealed by genomic phenotyping and interactome mapping. Mol Cancer Res 1(2):103-12 |





