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The Yeast Deletion Collection: A Decade of Functional Genomics

Journal

GENETICS
Volume 197, Issue 2, Pages 451-465

Publisher

GENETICS SOCIETY AMERICA
DOI: 10.1534/genetics.114.161620

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Funding

  1. National Human Genome Research Institute of the National Institutes of Health

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The yeast deletion collections comprise.21,000 mutant strains that carry precise start-to-stop deletions of similar to 6000 open reading frames. This collection includes heterozygous and homozygous diploids, and haploids of both MATa and MAT alpha mating types. The yeast deletion collection, or yeast knockout (YKO) set, represents the first and only complete, systematically constructed deletion collection available for any organism. Conceived during the Saccharomyces cerevisiae sequencing project, work on the project began in 1998 and was completed in 2002. The YKO strains have been used in numerous laboratories in >1000 genome-wide screens. This landmark genome project has inspired development of numerous genome-wide technologies in organisms from yeast to man. Notable spinoff technologies include synthetic genetic array and HIPHOP chemogenomics. In this retrospective, we briefly describe the yeast deletion project and some of its most noteworthy biological contributions and the impact that these collections have had on the yeast research community and on genomics in general.

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