Difference between revisions of "SGD Newsletter, December 2025"

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WormBase announces the schedule for its final major update, WS298, in October 2025. This will mark the end of new WormBase releases and the shift to focus on integrating existing data into the Alliance of Genome Resources, ensuring vital C. elegans datasets remain accessible. This transition promises new tools and long-term access to curated data that scientists rely on. Stay tuned for more updates.
 
WormBase announces the schedule for its final major update, WS298, in October 2025. This will mark the end of new WormBase releases and the shift to focus on integrating existing data into the Alliance of Genome Resources, ensuring vital C. elegans datasets remain accessible. This transition promises new tools and long-term access to curated data that scientists rely on. Stay tuned for more updates.
 
Read more: https://blog.wormbase.org/2025/07/23/announcing-the-final-release-of-wormbase/
 
Read more: https://blog.wormbase.org/2025/07/23/announcing-the-final-release-of-wormbase/
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===FlyBase End of Funding===
 
===FlyBase End of Funding===

Revision as of 09:38, 11 December 2025

About this newsletter:
This is the December 2025 issue of the SGD newsletter. The goal of this newsletter is to inform our users about new features in SGD and to foster communication within the yeast community.

Support SGD this Holiday Season

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Budget cuts from NIH continue to strain SGD’s finances. Despite our efforts at reducing costs, we still have significant ongoing budgetary challenges. Donations are now critical for our work to continue. Your generous gift to SGD enables us to continue providing essential information for your research and teaching efforts. We are now able to accept gifts via credit card. To contribute using a credit card, please use this form: give.stanford.edu.

  • Under ‘Direct your gift,’ select ‘Other Stanford Designation’ from the pulldown menu
  • In the ‘Other’ text box, specify SGD by including the text “Saccharomyces Genome Database - Account : GHJKO, Genetics : WAZC”
  • Complete the form and payment to donate to SGD

If you’d like to contribute by check, please contact us at: sgd-helpdesk@lists.stanford.edu

We thank you in advance for your support!

New at SGD: Links to a Comprehensive Overview of Yeast Libraries

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Baruch et al. have compiled and published A comprehensive overview of yeast libraries and their role in advancing cell biology, which describes a comprehensive list of genome-wide collections of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. They have grouped similar strain libraries together and have curated detailed descriptions, mating types, genotypes, references, and genome coverage. This information can help researchers identify strain libraries of interest to them. All of this information can also be found in tables on LibrarYeast. We have added links to these tables under the Resources section of individual Protein, Phenotype, and Interaction tabs.


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Retirement of Mike Cherry

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After 32 years at SGD, our longtime PI Mike Cherry is leaving SGD to explore the world outside of the lab. On November 14th, many past and current Cherry lab members gathered at Stanford to celebrate Mike’s career. Thank you to everyone that came, and especially to everyone that shared stories or memories from the past 3 decades of SGD. Gavin Sherlock is the new PI, and he’s hardly a stranger to SGD! Mike and Gavin published their first article together about SGD in Science all the way back in 1998: Chervitz et al., Comparison of the Complete Protein Sets of Worm and Yeast: Orthology and Divergence.

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Reminder: Submit Data Form

If you're itching for something to do over the winter break, have you checked your newly published data at SGD lately? SGD can use your help! Authors can submit data and information about their publications by pointing us to novel results, datasets (we appreciate GEO accession IDs!), or other important information, using SGD's simple “Submit Data" form (https://www.yeastgenome.org/submitData).

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Alliance of Genome Resources News

Alliance of Genome Resources – Latest Release 8.2.0

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The 8.2.0 release includes data refreshes from each of the model organism source databases as well as various backend improvements. The sequence viewers on the gene and allele pages have been restored; On gene pages, in the Alleles and Variants and Sequence Feature Viewer sections, and on allele pages, in the Genomic Variant Information section (see for example https://www.alliancegenome.org/gene/MGI:109583#alleles-and-variants and https://www.alliancegenome.org/allele/MGI:6781825). Also, on the gene page Alleles and Variants section, interactions between the variant sequence viewer and the alleles/variants table have been restored. Website infrastructure is upgraded to React 19 and migrated to Vite. Alliance Webinars: MicroPublication Biology View the video of the next Alliance of Genome Resources webinar: Webinar: Introduction to MicroPublication Biology Presented on November 20, 2025 Tim Schedl, microPublication Biology Editorial Board member, will give an overview of the MicroPublication journal which published brief scholarly reports of research findings based on data presented in a single figure. Webinars are also planned for 2026, in January, February, and March.See the Event Calendar with the schedule of upcoming Alliance office hours and webinars: Alliance of Genome Resources

Final Release of WormBase

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WormBase announces the schedule for its final major update, WS298, in October 2025. This will mark the end of new WormBase releases and the shift to focus on integrating existing data into the Alliance of Genome Resources, ensuring vital C. elegans datasets remain accessible. This transition promises new tools and long-term access to curated data that scientists rely on. Stay tuned for more updates. Read more: https://blog.wormbase.org/2025/07/23/announcing-the-final-release-of-wormbase/


FlyBase End of Funding

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FlyBase Update – October 2025 The termination of the NIH/NHGRI FlyBase grant has placed the long-term sustainability of FlyBase at risk. However, thanks to the generous support of several key individuals and institutions, FlyBase has announced that they will remain operational through the coming year. Looking ahead, ensuring FlyBase’s sustainability beyond the next year – and successfully integrating with the Alliance – will require new funding sources. FlyBase, like SGD, is asking for continued donations from any and all Fly supporters: European labs: Please consider contributing to the Cambridge, U.K. FlyBase group U.S. and other non-European labs: Please consider contributing to the U.S. FlyBase groups For more information on how to support FlyBase: Contribute to FlyBase

microPublications – Latest Yeast Papers

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​microPublication Biology is part of the emerging genre of rapidly-published research communications. microPublications publishes brief, novel findings, negative and/or reproduced results, and results which may initially lack a broader scientific narrative. Each article is peer-reviewed, assigned a DOI, and indexed through PubMed and PubMedCentral. Consider microPubublications when you have a result that doesn’t necessarily fit into a larger story, but will be of value to others. Latest yeast microPublications:

  • King A, Emery TM, Reese K, Tinsley HN (2025) Yeast gene of unknown function YGL081W is involved in DNA damage response. MicroPubl Biol 2025
  • Avogo EW, Burlingame NA, Badenahalli Narasimhaiah S, Delorme-Axford E (2025) Bioinformatics analysis identifies Mot2 protein as a potential regulator of autophagy in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. MicroPubl Biol 2025
  • Nnabuenyi N, Sands MA, Camlin NJ (2025) Specific auxin and medium combinations alter Saccharomyces cerevisiae growth. MicroPubl Biol 2025
  • Sasahara M, Matsumoto S, Tamura Y (2025) Dnm1 Is Required for the Focal Clustering of Fis1 on the Mitochondrial Outer Membrane. MicroPubl Biol 2025
  • Dutca LM, Freed EF, Baserga SJ (2025) Yeast pre-rRNA is processed at the A' site. MicroPubl Biol 2025
  • Schiemann AH, Sarwar M, Sattlegger E (2025) Functional Analysis of the Yeast Counterpart to the Human GCN2 p.Glu738_Asp739insArgArg Variant. MicroPubl Biol 2025
  • Torvi JR, Wong J, Drubin DG, Barnes G (2025) Stu2 is required for plus-end directed chromosome transport along microtubules during metaphase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. MicroPubl Biol 2025
  • VanderVen K, Butcher C, Fokine R, Li J (2025) Pep12 is important for proteasome microautophagy under low glucose conditions. MicroPubl Biol 2025
  • Tang L, AlKaabi A, Meyer D (2025) Copper Homeostasis is influenced by Ics3 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. MicroPubl Biol 2025
  • Taguchi S, Matsuzawa R, Suda Y, Irie K, Ozaki H (2025) Investigating the effects of liquid handling robot pipetting speed on yeast growth and gene expression using growth assays and RNA-seq. MicroPubl Biol 2025
  • Takesue H, Okada S, Ito T (2025) Long-read plasmid sequencing strategy for evaluating intrinsic instability of tandem gene arrays. MicroPubl Biol 2025

Upcoming Conferences & Courses

Happy Holidays from SGD!

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We want to take this opportunity to wish you and your family, friends, and lab mates the best during the upcoming holidays. Stanford University will be closed for two weeks starting end of day Friday, December 19th, and reopening on Monday, January 5th, 2026. Although SGD staff members will be taking time off, the website will be up and running throughout the winter break, and we will resume responding to user requests and questions in the new year. Note: If you wish to receive this newsletter via email, please contact the SGD Help Desk at sgd-helpdesk@lists.stanford.edu.