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Mapping the cellular response to small molecules using chemogenomic fitness signatures

Authors :
Chris A. Kaiser
Geoffrey Duby
Lawrence E. Heisler
Kahlin Cheung-Ong
Grant W. Brown
Anuradha Surendra
Gary D. Bader
Ana Aparicio
Eula Fung
Aaron D. Schimmer
Ronald W. Davis
William S. Trimble
Moshe K. Kim
Michael Proctor
Iain M. Wallace
Aaron H. Nile
Jacqueline Cherfils
Malene L. Urbanus
Mitchell K. L. Han
Marc Boutry
Ulrich Schlecht
Eric D. Spear
Vytas A. Bankaitis
Paul A. Spagnuolo
Robert P. St.Onge
Carolyn L. Cummins
Anna Y. Lee
Marinella Gebbia
Yan Wu
Sundari Suresh
Nikko P. Torres
Jennifer Chiang
Yulia Jitkova
Mahel Zeghouf
Elena Lissina
Corey Nislow
Guri Giaever
Marcela Gronda
Molly Miranda
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biology
Spear, Eric D.
Kaiser, Chris
Source :
PMC
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Yeasty HIPHOP In order to identify how chemical compounds target genes and affect the physiology of the cell, tests of the perturbations that occur when treated with a range of pharmacological chemicals are required. By examining the haploinsufficiency profiling (HIP) and homozygous profiling (HOP) chemogenomic platforms, Lee et al. (p. 208 ) analyzed the response of yeast to thousands of different small molecules, with genetic, proteomic, and bioinformatic analyses. Over 300 compounds were identified that targeted 121 genes within 45 cellular response signature networks. These networks were used to extrapolate the likely effects of related chemicals, their impact upon genetic pathways, and to identify putative gene functions.

Details

ISSN :
10959203
Volume :
344
Issue :
6180
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science (New York, N.Y.)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....aadd7608173af99d1b40d902d05e0556