SQS1/YNL224C Literature Guide Help

Other names published for SQS1: PFA1, YNL224C

SQS1 - All Curated References (16)

ReferenceOther Genes Addressed
Jakovljevic J, et al.  (2012) Ribosomal proteins L7 and L8 function in concert with six A3 assembly factors to propagate assembly of domains I and II of 25S rRNA in yeast 60S ribosomal subunits. RNA 18(10):1805-22
Risler JK, et al.  (2012) Host co-factors of the retrovirus-like transposon Ty1. Mob DNA 3(1):12
Tkach JM, et al.  (2012) Dissecting DNA damage response pathways by analysing protein localization and abundance changes during DNA replication stress. Nat Cell Biol 14(9):966-76
Walbott H, et al.  (2010) Prp43p contains a processive helicase structural architecture with a specific regulatory domain. EMBO J 29(13):2194-204
Lebaron S, et al.  (2009) The ATPase and helicase activities of Prp43p are stimulated by the G-patch protein Pfa1p during yeast ribosome biogenesis. EMBO J 28(24):3808-19
Pandit S, et al.  (2009) Spp382p interacts with multiple yeast splicing factors, including possible regulators of Prp43 DExD/H-Box protein function. Genetics 183(1):195-206
Pertschy B, et al.  (2009) RNA helicase Prp43 and its co-factor Pfa1 promote 20 to 18 S rRNA processing catalyzed by the endonuclease Nob1. J Biol Chem 284(50):35079-91
Pandit S, et al.  (2006) Inhibition of a spliceosome turnover pathway suppresses splicing defects. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 103(37):13700-5
Algire MA, et al.  (2005) Pi release from eIF2, not GTP hydrolysis, is the step controlled by start-site selection during eukaryotic translation initiation. Mol Cell 20(2):251-62
Fekete CA, et al.  (2005) The eIF1A C-terminal domain promotes initiation complex assembly, scanning and AUG selection in vivo. EMBO J 24(20):3588-601
Lebaron S, et al.  (2005) The splicing ATPase prp43p is a component of multiple preribosomal particles. Mol Cell Biol 25(21):9269-82
Huh WK, et al.  (2003) Global analysis of protein localization in budding yeast. Nature 425(6959):686-91
Stevenson LF, et al.  (2001) A large-scale overexpression screen in Saccharomyces cerevisiae identifies previously uncharacterized cell cycle genes. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 98(7):3946-51
de Groot PW, et al.  (2001) A genomic approach for the identification and classification of genes involved in cell wall formation and its regulation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Comp Funct Genomics 2(3):124-42
Brachat A, et al.  (2000) Analysis of deletion phenotypes and GFP fusions of 21 novel Saccharomyces cerevisiae open reading frames. Yeast 16(3):241-53
Pandolfo D, et al.  (1996) The DNA sequence of cosmid 14-5 from chromosome XIV reveals 21 open reading frames including a novel gene encoding a globin-like domain. Yeast 12(10B Suppl):1071-6