Difference between revisions of "YDR307W"

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(UW Stout/D2O SP22)
(Community Commentary)
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===[[UW-Stout/UV Light SP22]]===
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As part of the University of Wisconsin Stout [[UW-STOUT/About|Orphan Gene Project]] this gene was tested under a UV Light [[UW-Stout/UV Light SP22|using this protocol.]]
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'''RESULTS'''
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[[File:ASHTONMIKOLOSKIFinal Project Graph.png|400px|]]
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[[File:AshtonGene5.jpg|400px|]]
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'''INTERPERTATION'''
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In the graph and photos above, exposing this gene to 600 seconds of 400 Watt UV Light killed approximately 80% of yeast cell cultures, compared to its control counterpart, which was the same gene and amount of cells, just was not exposed to UV Light.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 12:35, 3 May 2022

Share your knowledge...Edit this entry! <protect>

Systematic name YDR307W
Gene name PMT7
Aliases
Feature type ORF, Uncharacterized
Coordinates Chr IV:1075865..1077853
Primary SGDID S000002715


Description of YDR307W: Putative protein mannosyltransferase similar to Pmt1p; has a potential role in protein O-glycosylation[1]




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Community Commentary

About Community Commentary. Please share your knowledge!

This gene is part of the UW-Stout Orphan Gene Project. Learn more here.



UW Stout/D2O SP22

4.28.2022 1.png

The YDR307W Knock Out Yeast Strain is A5 and is fairly unaffected by the 35% dilution of D2O, however, has a slight sensitivity to the dilution. With the maximum value ranging along the lines of 0.4-0.5 OD 600.


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UW-Stout/UV Light SP22

As part of the University of Wisconsin Stout Orphan Gene Project this gene was tested under a UV Light using this protocol.

RESULTS

ASHTONMIKOLOSKIFinal Project Graph.png AshtonGene5.jpg


INTERPERTATION In the graph and photos above, exposing this gene to 600 seconds of 400 Watt UV Light killed approximately 80% of yeast cell cultures, compared to its control counterpart, which was the same gene and amount of cells, just was not exposed to UV Light.

References

See Help:References on how to add references

  1. Gentzsch M and Tanner W (1996) The PMT gene family: protein O-glycosylation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is vital. EMBO J 15(21):5752-9 SGD PMID 8918452

See Help:Categories on how to add the wiki page for this gene to a Category </protect>