Skip Navigation

Nucleic Acids Research 2006 34(Database Issue):D432-D435; doi:10.1093/nar/gkj160
This Article
Right arrow Abstract Freely available
Right arrow Print PDF (200K) Freely available
Right arrow Screen PDF (204K) Freely available
Right arrow Supplementary Material
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Services
Right arrow Email this article to a friend
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Similar articles in PubMed
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Add to My Personal Archive
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow Commercial Re-use Guidelines
for Open Access NAR Content
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by Sherman, D.
Right arrow Articles by Souciet, J.-L.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
PubMed
Right arrow PubMed Citation
Right arrow Articles by Sherman, D.
Right arrow Articles by Souciet, J.-L.
Social Bookmarking
 Add to CiteULike   Add to Connotea   Add to Del.icio.us  
What's this?

Nucleic Acids Research, 2006, Vol. 34, Database issue D432-D435
© The Author 2006. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved
The online version of this article has been published under an open access model. Users are entitled to use, reproduce, disseminate, or display the open access version of this article for non-commercial purposes provided that: the original authorship is properly and fully attributed; the Journal and Oxford University Press are attributed as the original place of publication with the correct citation details given; if an article is subsequently reproduced or disseminated not in its entirety but only in part or as a derivative work this must be clearly indicated. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions{at}oxfordjournals.org


Article

Génolevures complete genomes provide data and tools for comparative genomics of hemiascomycetous yeasts

David Sherman*, Pascal Durrens1, Florian Iragne, Emmanuelle Beyne, Macha Nikolski and Jean-Luc Souciet2

LaBRI, Laboratoire Bordelais de Recherche en Informatique, UMR CNRS 5800 351 cours de la Libération, 33405 Talence cedex, France 1Centre de Bioinformatique de Bordeaux 146, rue Léo Saignat, 33076 Bordeaux, France 2Génétique et Microbiologie, FRE 2326 ULP/CNRS, GDR CNRS 2354, Institut de Botanique 28 rue Goëthe, 67000 Strasbourg, France

*To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel: +33 540 00 6922; Fax: +33 540 00 6669; Email: sherman{at}labri.fr

Received September 17, 2005. Revised October 21, 2005. Accepted October 31, 2005.


    ABSTRACT
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 COMPLETE SEQUENCING AND...
 GENOLEVURES PROTEIN FAMILIES
 EXPLORING GENOLEVURES DATA
 ONGOING DEVELOPMENTS
 TECHNICAL NOTES
 SUPPLEMENTARY DATA
 REFERENCES
 
The Génolevures online database (http://cbi.labri.fr/Genolevures/) provides tools and data relative to 4 complete and 10 partial genome sequences determined and manually annotated by the Génolevures Consortium, to facilitate comparative genomic studies of hemiascomycetous yeasts. With their relatively small and compact genomes, yeasts offer a unique opportunity for exploring eukaryotic genome evolution. The new version of the Génolevures database provides truly complete (subtelomere to subtelomere) chromosome sequences, 25 000 protein-coding and tRNA genes, and in silico analyses for each gene element. A new feature of the database is a novel collection of conserved multi-species protein families and their mapping to metabolic pathways, coupled with an advanced search feature. Data are presented with a focus on relations between genes and genomes: conservation of genes and gene families, speciation, chromosomal reorganization and synteny. The Génolevures site includes an area for specific studies by members of its international community.


    INTRODUCTION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 COMPLETE SEQUENCING AND...
 GENOLEVURES PROTEIN FAMILIES
 EXPLORING GENOLEVURES DATA
 ONGOING DEVELOPMENTS
 TECHNICAL NOTES
 SUPPLEMENTARY DATA
 REFERENCES
 
Comparative analysis of genomes is greatly facilitated when their sequences are complete, fully assembled and carefully annotated. Detailed analysis of species- and clade-specific gain or loss of function, and expansions or contractions of gene families, provide useful insight into the mechanisms of molecular evolution and can be performed with confidence when data are complete. The Génolevures online database provides such data for complete genomes of four species from the class of Hemiascomycete yeasts, search and analysis tools for comparing these genomes and community pages for ongoing developments. New complete genomes will be added in 2006.

With their relatively small and compact genomes, yeasts offer a unique opportunity to explore eukaryotic genome evolution by comparative analysis of several species. Yeasts are widely used as cell factories, for the production of beer, wine and bread and more recently of various metabolic products such as vitamins, ethanol, citric acid, lipids, etc. Yeasts can assimilate hydrocarbons (genera Candida, Yarrowia and Debaryomyces), depolymerise tannin extracts (Zygosaccharomyces rouxii) and produce hormones and vaccines in industrial quantities through heterologous gene expression. For review see Ref. (1). Several yeast species are pathogenic for humans. Among the most frequent disease agents are the Hemiascomycetes Candida albicans, Candida glabrata, Candida tropicalis and the Basidiomycete Cryptococcus neoformans. Even Saccharomyces cerevisiae may be pathogenic in immunocompromised patients (2). The most well known yeast in the Hemiascomycete class is S.cerevisiae (3), widely used as a model organism for molecular genetics and cell biology studies, and as a cell factory. As the most thoroughly-annotated genome of the small eukaryotes, it is a common reference for the annotation of other species. The hemiascomycetous yeasts represent a homogeneous phylogenetic group of eukaryotes with a relatively large diversity at the physiological and ecological levels. Comparative genomic studies within this group have proved very informative (47).

The Génolevures program is devoted to large-scale comparisons of yeast genomes from various branches of the Hemiascomycete class, with the aim of addressing basic questions of molecular evolution such as the degrees of gene conservation, the identification of species-specific, clade-specific or class-specific genes, the distribution of genes among functional families, the rate of sequence and map divergences and mechanisms of chromosome shuffling.


    COMPLETE SEQUENCING AND ANNOTATION OF YEAST GENOMES
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 COMPLETE SEQUENCING AND...
 GENOLEVURES PROTEIN FAMILIES
 EXPLORING GENOLEVURES DATA
 ONGOING DEVELOPMENTS
 TECHNICAL NOTES
 SUPPLEMENTARY DATA
 REFERENCES
 
The Genoscope and the Institut Pasteur provide high-quality sequence data at 10x or better coverage, assembled into complete chromosomes from subtelomere to subtelomere, usually with no more than one gap per chromosome. Protein-coding and tRNA genes are identified using a variety of in silico methods reported elsewhere and are manually annotated by a network of volunteer experts. Comparative analysis of four genomes was reported in (8). Ongoing Génolevures sequencing projects are reported on and included in the online database as data are released. Currently the database contains 55 693 317 nt comprising 24 147 protein-coding genes and 1124 tRNA or snRNA genes.

The focus of the Génolevures database is to describe the relations between genes and genomes. We curate relations of orthology and paralogy between genes, as individuals or as members of protein families, chromosomal map reorganization and gain and loss of genes and functions. We do not provide detailed annotations of individual genes and proteins of S.cerevisiae which are already carefully maintained by MIPS and CYGD (http://mips.gsf.de/projects/fungi) (9) and SGD (http://www.yeastgenome.org/) (10) as well as in general-purpose databases such as UniProt (11) and EMBL (12).


    GÉNOLEVURES PROTEIN FAMILIES
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 COMPLETE SEQUENCING AND...
 GENOLEVURES PROTEIN FAMILIES
 EXPLORING GENOLEVURES DATA
 ONGOING DEVELOPMENTS
 TECHNICAL NOTES
 SUPPLEMENTARY DATA
 REFERENCES
 
While extensive chromosomal rearrangements combined with segmental and massive duplications make comparisons of yeast genome sequences difficult (13), relations of homology between protein-coding genes can be identified despite their great diversity at the molecular level (8). Families of homologous proteins provide a powerful tool for appreciating conservation, gain and loss of function within yeast genomes. Génolevures provides a unique collection of paralogous and orthologous protein families, identified using a novel consensus clustering algorithm (M. Nikolski, manuscript submitted) applied to a complementary set of homeomorphic [sharing full-length sequence similarity and similar domain architectures, see (14)] and nonhomeomorphic systematic Smith–Waterman (15) and Blast (16) sequence alignments. Similar approaches are developed on a wider scale (14) and are complementary to these yeast-specific families.


    EXPLORING GENOLEVURES DATA
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 COMPLETE SEQUENCING AND...
 GENOLEVURES PROTEIN FAMILIES
 EXPLORING GENOLEVURES DATA
 ONGOING DEVELOPMENTS
 TECHNICAL NOTES
 SUPPLEMENTARY DATA
 REFERENCES
 
The Génolevures online database is designed to help scientists gain insight into the mechanisms of eukaryotic molecular evolution by asking specific questions about the relationships between DNA and protein sequences (Figure 1; examples are shown in online Supplementary Data).



View larger version (25K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Figure 1 Links between Génolevures data and tools showing the principal workflows used by scientific users. Dark gray boxes represent dynamic, database-backed web pages, white boxes represent static web pages. Shorthand URL prefixes for these pages are shown in a monospaced font.

 
What genes exist, as orthologs for my favorite gene or as members of a functional class? (URL prefixes /concordance and /blast) Génolevures data can be searched by keyword, S.cerevisiae gene name, alignment to an arbitrary DNA or protein sequence and protein family identifier. A query simultaneously searches for and can return genes that have or may have a translation product, RNA and other genes that may have a transcription product only, cis-active elements and cross-genome protein families.

What is known about a given chromosomic element? (URL prefixes /elt) Each element, coding or not, has a summary page with a linkable URL that presents what is known about that element: annotation, chromosomic neighborhood and inter-genome alignments (with a clickable map), membership in a protein family, sequence data and domain architecture when known. Protein family membership is indicated both with the phyletic pattern and the phylogenetic profile of the family, which provides an immediate impression of the degree of conservation of that gene in hemiascomycete yeast species.

What relations exist in a protein family? (URL prefixes/fam) A protein family contains proteins with an observable evolutionary relationship that generally speaking lets one infer functional similarity. Each protein family is described on a summary page with a linkable URL that shows a cartoon of the pairwise relations between family members, linked annotations of the individual genes and a decorated multiple alignment of the family members computed with T-COFFEE (17). Links are provided to a pairwise distance matrix, a FastA file of protein sequences and a position-specific scoring matrix; the latter can be used to jump-start an iterative PSI-BLAST (16) search in public databanks for proteins similar to family members.

How are the individual genomes organized? (URL prefixes/elt and /perl/gbrowse) Chromosomal maps can be explored starting from the species page (e.g. /elt/CAGL for C.glabrata or /elt/YALI for Y.lipolytica) or directly through the genome browser (18), which provides a zoomable view of a chromosomal neighborhood with annotation tracks for different gene types and sequence features, and relations to orthologs in protein families showing conservation of function and synteny (when observable).

How are metabolic pathways conserved? (URL prefixes/path) Conservation of genes participating in KEGG (19) metabolic pathways may be explored, which makes it possible to emit hypotheses concerning the conservation of those pathways or the necessity of a particular gene for a given enzymatic function. Pathway conservation in a species is computed by coloring S.cerevisiae KEGG pathways with orthologs identified by Génolevures protein families. Each colored pathway contains both a summary and a detailed table of orthologs for each enzyme with useful information such as gene deletion effects.

How are membrane proteins and transporters classified? (URL prefixes /yeti) The YETI classification of these proteins from André Goffeau's lab (20), which indicates evolutionary relationships traced using non-ambiguous functional and phylogenetic criteria derived from the TCDB (21) classification system, can be explored and searched across the sequenced species.

Can I obtain sequence data? (URL prefixes /seq and /download) The latest release of annotated sequence data and protein family classification may be downloaded for local analysis. All Génolevures DNA and protein sequence data are also publicly available in EMBL and UniProt.


    ONGOING DEVELOPMENTS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 COMPLETE SEQUENCING AND...
 GENOLEVURES PROTEIN FAMILIES
 EXPLORING GENOLEVURES DATA
 ONGOING DEVELOPMENTS
 TECHNICAL NOTES
 SUPPLEMENTARY DATA
 REFERENCES
 
The Consortium is currently sequencing other yeast genomes from the Hemiascomycete class which will benefit from the same annotation pipeline. These genomes will be particularly helpful in refining Génolevures protein families, and in ongoing work on the construction of comparative views of cell function through inference of networks of protein–protein and protein–ligand interactions. Consortium member laboratories will continue to contribute results from a variety of focused studies, e.g. (2224).


    TECHNICAL NOTES
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 COMPLETE SEQUENCING AND...
 GENOLEVURES PROTEIN FAMILIES
 EXPLORING GENOLEVURES DATA
 ONGOING DEVELOPMENTS
 TECHNICAL NOTES
 SUPPLEMENTARY DATA
 REFERENCES
 
The Génolevures database uses a straightforward object model mapped to a relational database. Flexibility in the design is guaranteed through the use of controlled vocabularies: the Sequence Ontology (25) for DNA sequence features and GLO, our own ontology for comparative genomics (D. Sherman, unpublished data). Browsing of genomic maps and sequence features is provided by the Generic Genome Browser (18). The Blast service is provided by NCBI Blast 2.2.6 (16). The Génolevures web site uses a REST architecture internally (26) and extensively uses the BioPerl package (27) for manipulation of sequence data.


    SUPPLEMENTARY DATA
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 COMPLETE SEQUENCING AND...
 GENOLEVURES PROTEIN FAMILIES
 EXPLORING GENOLEVURES DATA
 ONGOING DEVELOPMENTS
 TECHNICAL NOTES
 SUPPLEMENTARY DATA
 REFERENCES
 
Supplementary Data are available at NAR Online.


    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
 
We wish to thank all our colleagues from the Génolevures Consortium for numerous, friendly and creative discussions and for their devoted contributions to the sequencing, assembly and annotations of the yeast genomes. Ingrid Lafontaine, Emmanuel Talla and Hélène Ferry-Dumazet significantly contributed to the refinement of Génolevures protein families. The YETI classification of transporters and membrane proteins is kindly provided by Benoît De Hertogh, Frédéric Hancy, Philippe Baret and André Goffeau. Comparative analysis of metabolic pathways is developed and maintained by F.I. Lionel Frangeul developed and maintains the CAAT-Box annotation system. Special thanks to Jean Weissenbach and Patrick Wincker of the Génoscope and Christiane Bouchier of the Institut Pasteur who have made the sequencing of these yeasts possible. Hardware and technical support for Génolevures is provided by the Laboratoire Bordelais de Recherche en Informatique (LaBRI, CNRS UMR 5800) for the Bordeaux Center for Bioinformatics (CBiB) and is made possible by funding from the University Bordeaux 1, the Aquitaine Région through the program ‘Génotypage et Génomique comparée’ and the ACI IMPBIO ‘Génolevures En Ligne.’ Génolevures is supported by CNRS (GDR 2354), various sources from host institutions of participating laboratories and by CNRG through Génoscope and the Réseau National des Génopoles. Funding to pay the Open Access publication charges for this article was provided by the CNRS.

Conflict of interest statement. None declared.


    Footnotes
 
The Génolevures Consortium: coordinated by J. L. Souciet and is composed of laboratories from the Institut Pasteur (Paris) the INA-PG (Paris-Grignon), the Universities Bordeaux 1 and 2, Claude Bernard (Lyon), Paris-Sud (Orsay), Pierre et Marie Curie (Paris 6), and Louis Pasteur (Strasbourg), the Institut Curie (Paris), the Génoscope (Evry) and the Génopole Pasteur-Ile-de-France (Paris).


    REFERENCES
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 COMPLETE SEQUENCING AND...
 GENOLEVURES PROTEIN FAMILIES
 EXPLORING GENOLEVURES DATA
 ONGOING DEVELOPMENTS
 TECHNICAL NOTES
 SUPPLEMENTARY DATA
 REFERENCES
 

  1. In Kurtzmann, C.P. and Fell, J.W. (Eds.). The Yeasts, A Taxonomic Study, 4th edition, . (1998) Amsterdam Elsevier .

  2. Tawfik, O.W., Papasian, C.J., Dixon, A.Y., Potter, L.M. (1989) Saccharomyces cerevisiae pneumonia in a patient with acquired immune deficiency syndrome J. Clin. Microbiol, . 27, 1689–1691[Abstract/Free Full Text] .

  3. Goffeau, A., Barrell, B.G., Bussey, H., Davis, R.W., Dujon, B., Feldmann, H., Galibert, F., Hoheisel, J.D., Jacq, C., Johnston, M., et al. (1996) Life with 6000 genes Science, 274, 546 563–567[Abstract/Free Full Text] .

  4. Souciet, J., Aigle, M., Artiguenave, F., Blandin, G., Bolotin-Fukuhara, M., Bon, E., Brottier, P., Casaregola, S., de Montigny, J., Duchateau-Nguyen, G., et al. (2000) Génolevures: Genomic exploration of the hemiascomycetous yeasts FEBS Lett, . 487, 1–149[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] .

  5. Cliften, P., Sudarsanam, P., Desikan, A., Fulton, L., Fulton, B., Majors, J., Waterston, R., Cohen, B.A., Johnston, M. (2003) Finding functional features in Saccharomyces genomes by phylogenetic footprinting Science, 301, 71–76[Abstract/Free Full Text] .

  6. Kellis, M., Patterson, N., Endrizzi, M., Birren, B., Lander, E.S. (2003) Sequencing and comparison of yeast species to identify genes and regulatory elements Nature, 423, 241–254[CrossRef][Medline] .

  7. Dietrich, F.S., Voegeli, S., Brachat, S., Lerch, A., Gates, K., Steiner, S., Mohr, C., Pohlmann, R., Luedi, P., Choi, S., et al. (2004) The Ashbya gossypii genome as a tool for mapping the ancient Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome Science, 304, 304–307[Abstract/Free Full Text] .

  8. Dujon, B., Sherman, D., Fischer, G., Durrens, P., Casaregola, S., Lafontaine, I., De Montigny, J., Marck, C., Neuveglise, C., Talla, E., et al. (2004) Genome evolution in yeasts Nature, 430, 35–44[CrossRef][Medline] .

  9. Mewes, H.W., Frishman, D., Guldener, U., Mannhaupt, G., Mayer, K., Mokrejs, M., Morgenstern, B., Munsterkotter, M., Rudd, S., Weil, B. (2002) MIPS: a database for genomes and protein sequences Nucleic Acids Res, . 30, 31–34[Abstract/Free Full Text] .

  10. Cherry, J.M., Adler, C., Ball, C., Chervitz, S.A., Dwight, S.S., Hester, E.T., Jia, Y., Juvik, G., Roe, T., Schroeder, M., et al. (1998) SGD: Saccharomyces Genome Database Nucleic Acids Res, . 26, 73–79[Abstract/Free Full Text] .

  11. Bairoch, A., Apweiler, R., Wu, C.H., Barker, W.C., Boeckmann, B., Ferro, S., Gasteiger, E., Huang, H., Lopez, R., Magrane, M., et al. (2005) The Universal Protein Resource (UniProt) Nucleic Acids Res, . 33, D154–D159[Abstract/Free Full Text] .

  12. Kanz, C., Aldebert, P., Althorpe, N., Baker, W., Baldwin, A., Bates, K., Browne, P., van den Broek, A., Castro, M., Cochrane, G., et al. (2005) The EMBL Nucleotide Sequence Database Nucleic Acids Res, . 33, D29–D33[Abstract/Free Full Text] .

  13. Llorente, B., Malpertuy, A., Neuveglise, C., de Montigny, J., Aigle, M., Artiguenave, F., Blandin, G., Bolotin-Fukuhara, M., Bon, E., Brottier, P., et al. (2000) Genomic exploration of the hemiascomycetous yeasts: 18. Comparative analysis of chromosome maps and synteny with Saccharomyces cerevisiae FEBS Lett, . 487, 101–112[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] .

  14. Wu, C.H., Nikolskaya, A., Huang, H., Yeh, L.S., Natale, D.A., Vinayaka, C.R., Hu, Z.Z., Mazumder, R., Kumar, S., Kourtesis, P., et al. (2004) PIRSF: family classification system at the Protein Information Resource Nucleic Acids Res, . 32, D112–D114[Abstract/Free Full Text] .

  15. Smith, T.F. and Waterman, M.S. (1981) Identification of common molecular subsequences J. Mol. Biol, . 147, 195–197[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] .

  16. Altschul, S.F., Madden, T.L., Schaffer, A.A., Zhang, J., Zhang, Z., Miller, W., Lipman, D.J. (1997) Gapped BLAST and PSI-BLAST: a new generation of protein database search programs Nucleic Acids Res, . 25, 3389–3402[Abstract/Free Full Text] .

  17. Notredame, C., Higgins, D.G., Heringa, J. (2000) T-Coffee: A novel method for fast and accurate multiple sequence alignment J. Mol. Biol, . 302, 205–217[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] .

  18. Stein, L.D., Mungall, C., Shu, S., Caudy, M., Mangone, M., Day, A., Nickerson, E., Stajich, J.E., Harris, T.W., Arwa, A., et al. (2002) The generic genome browser: a building block for a model organism system database Genome Res, . 12, 1599–1610[Abstract/Free Full Text] .

  19. Kanehisa, M. and Goto, S. (2000) KEGG: Kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes Nucleic Acids Res, . 28, 27–30[Abstract/Free Full Text] .

  20. De Hertogh, B., Hancy, F., Goffeau, A., Baret, P.V. (2005) Emergence of species-specific transporters during evolution of the Hemiascomycete phylum Genetics, doi:10.1534/genetics.105.046813 .

  21. Saier, M.H., Jr. (2000) A functional-phylogenetic classification system for transmembrane solute transporters Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev, . 64, 354–411[Abstract/Free Full Text] .

  22. Neuveglise, C., Chalvet, F., Wincker, P., Gaillardin, C., Casaregola, S. (2005) Mutator-like element in the yeast Yarrowia lipolytica displays multiple alternative splicings Eukaryot. Cell, 4, 615–624[Abstract/Free Full Text] .

  23. Richard, G.F., Kerrest, A., Lafontaine, I., Dujon, B. (2005) Comparative genomics of hemiascomycete yeasts: genes involved in DNA replication, repair, and recombination Mol. Biol. Evol, . 22, 1011–1023[Abstract/Free Full Text] .

  24. Fabre, E., Muller, H., Therizols, P., Lafontaine, I., Dujon, B., Fairhead, C. (2005) Comparative genomics in hemiascomycete yeasts: evolution of sex, silencing, and subtelomeres Mol. Biol. Evol, . 22, 856–873[Abstract/Free Full Text] .

  25. Eilbeck, K., Lewis, S.E., Mungall, C.J., Yandell, M., Stein, L., Durbin, R., Ashburner, M. (2005) The Sequence Ontology: A tool for the unification of genome annotations Genome Biol, . 6, R44[CrossRef][Medline] .

  26. Fielding, R. and Taylor, R.N. (2002) Principled design of the modern Web architecture ACM Trans. Internet Technol, . 2, 115–150[CrossRef] .

  27. Stajich, J.E., Block, D., Boulez, K., Brenner, S.E., Chervitz, S.A., Dagdigian, C., Fuellen, G., Gilbert, J.G.R., Korf, I., Lapp, H., et al. (2002) The Bioperl Toolkit: Perl modules for the life sciences Genome Res, . 12, 1611–1618[Abstract/Free Full Text] .


Add to CiteULike CiteULike   Add to Connotea Connotea   Add to Del.icio.us Del.icio.us    What's this?


This article has been cited by other articles:


Home page
Nucleic Acids ResHome page
J. W. Whitaker, I. Letunic, G. A. McConkey, and D. R. Westhead
metaTIGER: a metabolic evolution resource
Nucleic Acids Res., January 1, 2009; 37(suppl_1): D531 - D538.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Nucleic Acids ResHome page
D. J. Sherman, T. Martin, M. Nikolski, C. Cayla, J.-L. Souciet, P. Durrens, and for the Genolevures Consortium
Genolevures: protein families and synteny among complete hemiascomycetous yeast proteomes and genomes
Nucleic Acids Res., January 1, 2009; 37(suppl_1): D550 - D554.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Eukaryot CellHome page
P. W. J. de Groot, E. A. Kraneveld, Q. Y. Yin, H. L. Dekker, U. Gross, W. Crielaard, C. G. de Koster, O. Bader, F. M. Klis, and M. Weig
The Cell Wall of the Human Pathogen Candida glabrata: Differential Incorporation of Novel Adhesin-Like Wall Proteins
Eukaryot. Cell, November 1, 2008; 7(11): 1951 - 1964.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
BioinformaticsHome page
M. Nikolski and D. J. Sherman
Family relationships: should consensus reign?--consensus clustering for protein families
Bioinformatics, January 15, 2007; 23(2): e71 - e76.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Nucleic Acids ResHome page
C. J. Penkett, J. A. Morris, V. Wood, and J. Bahler
YOGY: a web-based, integrated database to retrieve protein orthologs and associated Gene Ontology terms.
Nucleic Acids Res., July 1, 2006; 34(Web Server issue): W330 - W334.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


This Article
Right arrow Abstract Freely available
Right arrow Print PDF (200K) Freely available
Right arrow Screen PDF (204K) Freely available
Right arrow Supplementary Material
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Services
Right arrow Email this article to a friend
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Similar articles in PubMed
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Add to My Personal Archive
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow Commercial Re-use Guidelines
for Open Access NAR Content
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by Sherman, D.
Right arrow Articles by Souciet, J.-L.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
PubMed
Right arrow PubMed Citation
Right arrow Articles by Sherman, D.
Right arrow Articles by Souciet, J.-L.
Social Bookmarking
 Add to CiteULike   Add to Connotea   Add to Del.icio.us  
What's this?