Difference between revisions of "YJL191W"

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'''Description of YJL191W:''' Ribosomal protein 59 of the small subunit, required for ribosome assembly and 20S pre-rRNA processing; mutations confer cryptopleurine resistance; nearly identical to Rps14Ap and similar to E. coli S11 and rat S14 ribosomal proteins<ref name='S000043763'>Larkin JC, et al. (1987) Structure and expression of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae CRY1 gene: a highly conserved ribosomal protein gene. Mol Cell Biol 7(5):1764-75 {{SGDpaper|S000043763}} PMID 3037334</ref><ref name='S000058462'>Moritz M, et al. (1990) Depletion of yeast ribosomal proteins L16 or rp59 disrupts ribosome assembly. J Cell Biol 111(6 Pt 1):2261-74 {{SGDpaper|S000058462}} PMID 2277060</ref><ref name='S000076292'>Jakovljevic J, et al. (2004) The carboxy-terminal extension of yeast ribosomal protein S14 is necessary for maturation of 43S preribosomes. Mol Cell 14(3):331-42 {{SGDpaper|S000076292}} PMID 15125836</ref><ref name='S000074367'>Lecompte O, et al. (2002) Comparative analysis of ribosomal proteins in complete genomes: an example of reductive evolution at the domain scale. Nucleic Acids Res 30(24):5382-90
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'''Description of YJL191W:''' Ribosomal protein 59 of the small subunit, required for ribosome assembly and 20S pre-rRNA processing; mutations confer cryptopleurine resistance; nearly identical to Rps14Ap and similar to E. coli S11 and rat S14 ribosomal proteins<ref name='S000076292'>Jakovljevic J, et al. (2004) The carboxy-terminal extension of yeast ribosomal protein S14 is necessary for maturation of 43S preribosomes. Mol Cell 14(3):331-42 {{SGDpaper|S000076292}} PMID 15125836</ref><ref name='S000043763'>Larkin JC, et al. (1987) Structure and expression of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae CRY1 gene: a highly conserved ribosomal protein gene. Mol Cell Biol 7(5):1764-75 {{SGDpaper|S000043763}} PMID 3037334</ref><ref name='S000074367'>Lecompte O, et al. (2002) Comparative analysis of ribosomal proteins in complete genomes: an example of reductive evolution at the domain scale. Nucleic Acids Res 30(24):5382-90 {{SGDpaper|S000074367}} PMID 12490706</ref><ref name='S000058462'>Moritz M, et al. (1990) Depletion of yeast ribosomal proteins L16 or rp59 disrupts ribosome assembly. J Cell Biol 111(6 Pt 1):2261-74
  {{SGDpaper|S000074367}} PMID 12490706</ref>
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  {{SGDpaper|S000058462}} PMID 2277060</ref>
 
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Revision as of 14:05, 25 February 2010

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Systematic name YJL191W
Gene name RPS14B
Aliases CRY2
Feature type ORF, Verified
Coordinates Chr X:73786..74610
Primary SGDID S000003727


Description of YJL191W: Ribosomal protein 59 of the small subunit, required for ribosome assembly and 20S pre-rRNA processing; mutations confer cryptopleurine resistance; nearly identical to Rps14Ap and similar to E. coli S11 and rat S14 ribosomal proteins[1][2][3][4]




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DNA and RNA Details

Other DNA and RNA Details

Other Topic: expression

Specifically higher expression in carbon limited chemostat cultures versus carbon excess. [5] [6]





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References

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  1. Jakovljevic J, et al. (2004) The carboxy-terminal extension of yeast ribosomal protein S14 is necessary for maturation of 43S preribosomes. Mol Cell 14(3):331-42 SGD PMID 15125836
  2. Larkin JC, et al. (1987) Structure and expression of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae CRY1 gene: a highly conserved ribosomal protein gene. Mol Cell Biol 7(5):1764-75 SGD PMID 3037334
  3. Lecompte O, et al. (2002) Comparative analysis of ribosomal proteins in complete genomes: an example of reductive evolution at the domain scale. Nucleic Acids Res 30(24):5382-90 SGD PMID 12490706
  4. Moritz M, et al. (1990) Depletion of yeast ribosomal proteins L16 or rp59 disrupts ribosome assembly. J Cell Biol 111(6 Pt 1):2261-74 SGD PMID 2277060
  5. Boer VM, et al. (2003) The genome-wide transcriptional responses of Saccharomyces cerevisiae grown on glucose in aerobic chemostat cultures limited for carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, or sulfur. J Biol Chem 278(5):3265-74 SGD PMID 12414795
  6. submitted by Viktor Boer on 2003-07-25

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