Difference between revisions of "Methods"
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*The at the University of Washington facilitates the study of yeast protein complexes by providing access to techniques such as mass spectrometry, two-hybrid arrays, deconvolution fluorescence microscopy and protein structure prediction. | *The at the University of Washington facilitates the study of yeast protein complexes by providing access to techniques such as mass spectrometry, two-hybrid arrays, deconvolution fluorescence microscopy and protein structure prediction. | ||
− | *Full text of the paper (Erdeniz <i>et al.</i> (1997) Genome Res. 7:1174-1183) describing . Available to the public without password restriction and at no charge, through a special arrangement with Genome Research arranged by Rodney Rothstein (''see [[CommunityW303.html|detailed notes]] from RR and Stephan Bartsch for the W303 strain used in the study''). | + | *Full text of the paper (Erdeniz <i>et al.</i> (1997) Genome Res. 7:1174-1183) describing . Available to the public without password restriction and at no charge, through a special arrangement with Genome Research arranged by Rodney Rothstein (''see [[CommunityW303.html|detailed notes]][http://www.mightystudents.com essay topics] from RR and Stephan Bartsch for the W303 strain used in the study''). |
* from Maitreya Dunham's lab, Princeton University. See her . | * from Maitreya Dunham's lab, Princeton University. See her . |
Revision as of 06:09, 21 September 2010
from the Breeden Lab, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.
from the Gottschling Lab, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.
from the Gasch Lab, University of Wisconsin-Madison.
from the University of Manitoba.
from the Fangman and Brewer Labs, University of Washington.
information page from Erica Golemis's laboratory at the Fox Chase Cancer Center.
, a complete guide to microarraying for the molecular biologist, from the Brown Lab, Stanford University.
, by Audrey Gasch, from Guide to Yeast Genetics and Molecular and Cellular Biology, Methods in Enzymology (2002)
- The at the University of Washington facilitates the study of yeast protein complexes by providing access to techniques such as mass spectrometry, two-hybrid arrays, deconvolution fluorescence microscopy and protein structure prediction.
- Full text of the paper (Erdeniz et al. (1997) Genome Res. 7:1174-1183) describing . Available to the public without password restriction and at no charge, through a special arrangement with Genome Research arranged by Rodney Rothstein (see detailed notesessay topics from RR and Stephan Bartsch for the W303 strain used in the study).
- from Maitreya Dunham's lab, Princeton University. See her .
- A Classroom Guide To Yeast Experiments] from The GENE project at Kansas State University based on .
- from the RNA Decay Resource, a resource for the sharing of information, know-how, and wisdom among researchers who study mRNA decay.
- SGA SGA protocols and scoring software.
- from Life in Research, LLC. Also life sciences databases, online tools, software, and powerpoints. For example
- created by members of the scientific community.