Authors
Lars M Steinmetz, Curt Scharfe, Adam M Deutschbauer, Dejana Mokranjac, Zelek S Herman, Ted Jones, Angela M Chu, Guri Giaever, Holger Prokisch, Peter J Oefner, Ronald W Davis
Publication date
2002/8
Journal
Nature genetics
Volume
31
Issue
4
Pages
400-404
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Description
High similarity between yeast and human mitochondria allows functional genomic study of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to be used to identify human genes involved in disease 1. So far, 102 heritable disorders have been attributed to defects in a quarter of the known nuclear-encoded mitochondrial proteins in humans 2. Many mitochondrial diseases remain unexplained, however, in part because only 40–60% of the presumed 700–1,000 proteins involved in mitochondrial function and biogenesis have been identified 3. Here we apply a systematic functional screen using the pre-existing whole-genome pool of yeast deletion mutants 4, 5, 6 to identify mitochondrial proteins. Three million measurements of strain fitness identified 466 genes whose deletions impaired mitochondrial respiration, of which 265 were new. Our approach gave higher selection than other systematic approaches, including fivefold greater …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
LM Steinmetz, C Scharfe, AM Deutschbauer… - Nature genetics, 2002