» Articles » PMID: 15489318

ORFeome Cloning and Systems Biology: Standardized Mass Production of the Parts from the Parts-list

Overview
Journal Genome Res
Specialty Genetics
Date 2004 Oct 19
PMID 15489318
Citations 31
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Together with metabolites, proteins and RNAs form complex biological systems through highly intricate networks of physical and functional interactions. Large-scale studies aimed at a molecular understanding of the structure, function, and dynamics of proteins and RNAs in the context of cellular networks require novel approaches and technologies. This Special Issue of Genome Research features strategies for the high-throughput construction and manipulation of complete sets of protein-encoding open reading frames (ORFeome), gene promoters (promoterome), and noncoding RNAs, as predicted from genome and transcriptome sequences. Here we discuss the use of a recombinational cloning system that allows efficiency, adaptability, and compatibility in the generation of ORFeome, promoterome, and other resources.

Citing Articles

Assembly of Long-Adapter Single-Strand Oligonucleotide (LASSO) Probes for Massively Parallel Capture of Kilobase Size DNA Targets.

Chkaiban L, Tosi L, Parekkadan B Curr Protoc. 2021; 1(11):e278.

PMID: 34807521 PMC: 8669654. DOI: 10.1002/cpz1.278.


SapTrap Assembly of MosSCI Transgene Vectors.

Fan X, De Henau S, Feinstein J, Miller S, Han B, Frokjaer-Jensen C G3 (Bethesda). 2019; 10(2):635-644.

PMID: 31848219 PMC: 7003106. DOI: 10.1534/g3.119.400822.


Inducible LAP-tagged Stable Cell Lines for Investigating Protein Function, Spatiotemporal Localization and Protein Interaction Networks.

Bradley M, Ramirez I, Cheung K, Gholkar A, Torres J J Vis Exp. 2017; (118).

PMID: 28060263 PMC: 5226453. DOI: 10.3791/54870.


The Xenopus ORFeome: A resource that enables functional genomics.

Grant I, Balcha D, Hao T, Shen Y, Trivedi P, Patrushev I Dev Biol. 2015; 408(2):345-57.

PMID: 26391338 PMC: 4684507. DOI: 10.1016/j.ydbio.2015.09.004.


The EHEC-host interactome reveals novel targets for the translocated intimin receptor.

Blasche S, Arens S, Ceol A, Siszler G, Schmidt M, Hauser R Sci Rep. 2014; 4:7531.

PMID: 25519916 PMC: 4269881. DOI: 10.1038/srep07531.