BAIT

SFT2

L000002950, YBL102W
Tetra-spanning membrane protein found mostly in the late Golgi; non-essential; can suppress some sed5 alleles; may be part of the transport machinery, but precise function is unknown; similar to mammalian syntaxin 5
GO Process (1)
GO Function (0)
GO Component (3)
Saccharomyces cerevisiae (S288c)
PREY

VPS3

PEP6, VPL3, VPT17, CORVET complex subunit VPS3, L000002469, YDR495C
Component of CORVET membrane tethering complex; cytoplasmic protein required for the sorting and processing of soluble vacuolar proteins, acidification of the vacuolar lumen, and assembly of the vacuolar H+-ATPase
GO Process (3)
GO Function (0)
GO Component (1)

Gene Ontology Cellular Component

Saccharomyces cerevisiae (S288c)

Synthetic Lethality

A genetic interaction is inferred when mutations or deletions in separate genes, each of which alone causes a minimal phenotype, result in lethality when combined in the same cell under a given condition.

Publication

Got1p and Sft2p: membrane proteins involved in traffic to the Golgi complex.

Conchon S, Cao X, Barlowe C, Pelham HR

Traffic through the yeast Golgi complex depends on a member of the syntaxin family of SNARE proteins, Sed5p, present in early Golgi cisternae. Sft2p is a non-essential tetra-spanning membrane protein, found mostly in the late Golgi, that can suppress some sed5 alleles. We screened for mutations that show synthetic lethality with sft2 and found one that affects a previously uncharacterized ... [more]

EMBO J. Jul. 15, 1999; 18(14);3934-46 [Pubmed: 10406798]

Throughput

  • Low Throughput

Ontology Terms

  • inviable (APO:0000112)

Curated By

  • BioGRID