Difference between revisions of "YBR109C"

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(Community Commentary)
(Community Commentary)
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<ref> Davis, T. N. (1992).  A temperature-sensitive calmodulin mutant loses viability during mitosis.  J. Cell Biol., 118:607-617.</ref>
 
<ref> Davis, T. N. (1992).  A temperature-sensitive calmodulin mutant loses viability during mitosis.  J. Cell Biol., 118:607-617.</ref>
 
<br> cmd1-3:  temperature-sensitive defect in mitosis and complete defect in all Ca<sup>2+</sup>-dependent functions (unpublished and <ref>Geiser, J. R., D. van Tuinen, S. E. Brockerhoff, M. M. Neff, T. N. Davis. (1991). Can calmodulin function without binding calcium?  Cell, 65, 949-959.</ref>)
 
<br> cmd1-3:  temperature-sensitive defect in mitosis and complete defect in all Ca<sup>2+</sup>-dependent functions (unpublished and <ref>Geiser, J. R., D. van Tuinen, S. E. Brockerhoff, M. M. Neff, T. N. Davis. (1991). Can calmodulin function without binding calcium?  Cell, 65, 949-959.</ref>)
<br>cmd1-6:  no defect in mitosis, defective in all Ca<sup>2+</sup>-dependent functions (unpublished and <ref>Geiser, J. R., D. van Tuinen, S. E. Brockerhoff, M. M. Neff, T. N. Davis. (1991). Can calmodulin function without binding calcium?  Cell, 65, 949-959.</ref>)
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<br>cmd1-6:  no defect in mitosis, complete defect in all Ca<sup>2+</sup>-dependent functions (unpublished and <ref>Geiser, J. R., D. van Tuinen, S. E. Brockerhoff, M. M. Neff, T. N. Davis. (1991). Can calmodulin function without binding calcium?  Cell, 65, 949-959.</ref>)
 
<br>cmd1-8:  temperature-sensitive defect in bud growth (mild and only apparent at 38C) (unpublished)
 
<br>cmd1-8:  temperature-sensitive defect in bud growth (mild and only apparent at 38C) (unpublished)
  

Revision as of 20:02, 26 July 2008

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Systematic name YBR109C
Gene name CMD1
Aliases CaM
Feature type ORF, Verified
Coordinates Chr II:458356..457913
Primary SGDID S000000313


Description of YBR109C: Calmodulin; Ca++ binding protein that regulates Ca++ independent processes (mitosis, bud growth, actin organization, endocytosis, etc.) and Ca++ dependent processes (stress-activated pathways), targets include Nuf1p, Myo2p and calcineurin[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8]




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Community Commentary

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Summary of Davis lab calmodulin alleles:
cmd1-1: temperature-sensitive defect in mitosis with very minor defect in bud growth. [9]
cmd1-3: temperature-sensitive defect in mitosis and complete defect in all Ca2+-dependent functions (unpublished and [10])
cmd1-6: no defect in mitosis, complete defect in all Ca2+-dependent functions (unpublished and [11])
cmd1-8: temperature-sensitive defect in bud growth (mild and only apparent at 38C) (unpublished)




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References

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  1. Starai VJ, et al. (2005) Ion regulation of homotypic vacuole fusion in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Biol Chem 280(17):16754-62 SGD PMID 15737991
  2. Desrivieres S, et al. (2002) Calmodulin controls organization of the actin cytoskeleton via regulation of phosphatidylinositol (4,5)-bisphosphate synthesis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Biochem J 366(Pt 3):945-51 SGD PMID 12079494
  3. Cyert MS (2001) Genetic analysis of calmodulin and its targets in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Annu Rev Genet 35:647-72 SGD PMID 11700296
  4. Peters C and Mayer A (1998) Ca2+/calmodulin signals the completion of docking and triggers a late step of vacuole fusion. Nature 396(6711):575-80 SGD PMID 9859992
  5. Starovasnik MA, et al. (1993) Similarities and differences between yeast and vertebrate calmodulin: an examination of the calcium-binding and structural properties of calmodulin from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Biochemistry 32(13):3261-70 SGD PMID 8461293
  6. Ohya Y and Botstein D (1994) Diverse essential functions revealed by complementing yeast calmodulin mutants. Science 263(5149):963-6 SGD PMID 8310294
  7. Davis TN, et al. (1986) Isolation of the yeast calmodulin gene: calmodulin is an essential protein. Cell 47(3):423-31 SGD PMID 3533275
  8. Kubler E, et al. (1994) Calcium-independent calmodulin requirement for endocytosis in yeast. EMBO J 13(23):5539-46 SGD PMID 7988551
  9. Davis, T. N. (1992). A temperature-sensitive calmodulin mutant loses viability during mitosis. J. Cell Biol., 118:607-617.
  10. Geiser, J. R., D. van Tuinen, S. E. Brockerhoff, M. M. Neff, T. N. Davis. (1991). Can calmodulin function without binding calcium? Cell, 65, 949-959.
  11. Geiser, J. R., D. van Tuinen, S. E. Brockerhoff, M. M. Neff, T. N. Davis. (1991). Can calmodulin function without binding calcium? Cell, 65, 949-959.

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