Karen Stanger
University of Toronto
3 Papers
76 Citations
Karen Stanger is an academic researcher from University of Toronto. The author has contributed to research in topics: SH3 domain & Protein–protein interaction. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 3 publications.
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Papers
A High Throughput Screen to Identify Substrates for the Ubiquitin Ligase Rsp5
Bart Kus,Aaron Gajadhar,Karen Stanger,Rob Cho,Warren Sun,Nathalie Rouleau,Tammy K. Lee,Donovan Chan,Cheryl Wolting,Aled M. Edwards,Roger Bosse,Daniela Rotin +11 more
TL;DR: A luminescent assay to detect ubiquitination in vitro, which is more quantitative, effective, and sensitive than conventional ubiquitinated assays, and the combination of this sensitive assay and the availability of purified substrates will enable the identification of substrates for any purified E3 enzyme.
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Yeast adaptor protein, Nbp2p, is conserved regulator of fungal Ptc1p phosphatases and is involved in multiple signaling pathways.
TL;DR: It is shown that in a manner analogous to its role in the high osmolarity glycerol pathway, Nbp2p functions in the down-regulation of the cell wall integrity pathway through SH3 domain-mediated interaction with Bck1p, a component kinase of this pathway.
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A Conserved residue in the yeast Bem1p SH3 domain maintains the high level of binding specificity required for function.
TL;DR: This work identifies a residue in the Bem1p SH3b domain that inhibits binding, yet is highly conserved for the purpose of preventing nonspecific interactions and provides a clear illustration of the importance of intrinsic binding specificity for the function of protein-protein interaction modules.
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