STE7/YDL159W Literature Guide Help

Other names published for STE7: YDL159W

STE7 - Techniques and Reagents (9)

ReferenceOther Genes Addressed
Pincus D, et al.  (2010) Reagents for investigating MAPK signalling in model yeast species. Yeast 27(7):423-30
Shock TR, et al.  (2009) Hog1 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) interrupts signal transduction between the Kss1 MAPK and the Tec1 transcription factor to maintain pathway specificity. Eukaryot Cell 8(4):606-16
Tanaka H and Yi TM  (2009) Synthetic morphology using alternative inputs. PLoS One 4(9):e6946
Wu X and Jiang YW  (2005) Possible integration of upstream signals at Cdc42 in filamentous differentiation of S. cerevisiae. Yeast 22(13):1069-77
Bardwell AJ, et al.  (2003) Docking sites on mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) kinases, MAPK phosphatases and the Elk-1 transcription factor compete for MAPK binding and are crucial for enzymic activity. Biochem J 370(Pt 3):1077-85
Tatebayashi K, et al.  (2003) A docking site determining specificity of Pbs2 MAPKK for Ssk2/Ssk22 MAPKKKs in the yeast HOG pathway. EMBO J 22(14):3624-34
Hertveldt K, et al.  (2002) In vivo selectively infective phage as a tool to detect protein interactions: evaluation of a novel vector system with yeast Ste7p-Fus3p interacting proteins. Yeast 19(6):499-508
Wang Y and Dohlman HG  (2002) Pheromone-dependent ubiquitination of the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase Ste7. J Biol Chem 277(18):15766-72
Zhu H, et al.  (2000) Analysis of yeast protein kinases using protein chips. Nat Genet 26(3):283-9