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Large-scale phenotypic analysis reveals identical contributions to cell functions of known and unknown yeast genes

Authors :
Carlo Ricci
Alessandro Morlupi
Piotr P. Slonimski
Saravuth Ngo
Micheline Vandenbol
Michele M. Bianchi
Giovanna Carignani
Stefania Stefani
François Hilger
Giovanni B. Morlino
Laura Frontali
Geppo Sartori
Source :
Yeast. 18:1397-1412
Publication Year :
2001
Publisher :
Wiley, 2001.

Abstract

Sequencing of the yeast genome has shown that about one-third of the yeast ORFs code for unknown proteins. Many other have similarity to known genes, but still the cellular functions of the gene products are unknown. The aim of the B1 Consortium of the EUROFAN project was to perform a qualitative phenotypic analysis on yeast strains deleted for functionally orphan genes. To this end we set up a simple approach to detect growth defects of a relatively large number of strains in the presence of osmolytes, ethanol, high temperature, inhibitory compounds or drugs affecting protein biosynthesis, phosphorylation level or nucleic acids biosynthesis. We have now developed this procedure to a semi-quantitative level, we have included new inhibitors, such as hygromycin B, benomyl, metals and additional drugs interfering with synthesis of nucleic acids, and we have performed phenotypic analysis on the deleted strains of 564 genes poorly characterized in respect to their cellular functions. About 30% of the deleted strains showed at least one phenotype: many of them were pleiotropic. For many gene deletions, the linkage between the deletion marker and the observed phenotype(s) was studied by tetrad analysis and their co-segregation was demonstrated. Co-segregation was found in about two-thirds of the analysed strains showing phenotype(s). Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Details

ISSN :
10970061 and 0749503X
Volume :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Yeast
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d68372756e4d6d3c95c6fcd90889292f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/yea.784