1998
DOI: 10.1002/(sici)1097-0061(199811)14:15<1417::aid-yea334>3.3.co;2-e
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Quantitative analysis of yeast gene function using competition experiments in continuous culture

Abstract: One possible route to the evaluation of gene function is a quantitative approach based on the concepts of metabolic control analysis (MCA). An important first step in such an analysis is to determine the effect of deleting individual genes on the growth rate (or fitness) of S. cerevisiae. Since the specific growth-rate effects of most genes are likely to be small, we employed competition experiments in chemostat culture to measure the proportion of deletion mutants relative to that of a standard strain by usin… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…FY2 is the strain from which the BY strain series 14 , and hence the strain from which the complete knockout collection 15 , was derived. YSBN1 and YSBN2 are prototrophic strains that carry drug resistance markers inserted into their genomes at a phenotypically neutral site 16,17 . Besides the two diploid strains, a set of haploid strains with the two different mating types was also constructed (Supplementary Table S1).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…FY2 is the strain from which the BY strain series 14 , and hence the strain from which the complete knockout collection 15 , was derived. YSBN1 and YSBN2 are prototrophic strains that carry drug resistance markers inserted into their genomes at a phenotypically neutral site 16,17 . Besides the two diploid strains, a set of haploid strains with the two different mating types was also constructed (Supplementary Table S1).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yeast were grown in glucose-limited chemostat culture as described previously (10) in a medium (Table I) containing 100 mg/liter DL-[ 2 H 10 ]leucine (98.5 atom % excess) at a dilution rate of 0.1 h Ϫ1 . After a minimum of seven doubling times, sufficient to ensure that cells were fully labeled, unlabeled L-leucine (1 g in 50 ml) was added, and the incoming medium was changed to one containing unlabeled L-leucine at 50 mg/liter.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The precise control over growth rate also allows matching of growth rates between wild-type cultures and more slowly growing mutants, or among diverse strain backgrounds, by forcing the cells to grow at a steady state that is below the maximum growth rate of both (e.g., Hayes et al 2002;Torres et al 2007;Skelly et al 2013). Even small differences in competitive fitness can be accurately measured using the chemostat, making it a useful tool for characterizing individual mutants (Baganz et al 1998) and collections of strains (Delneri et al 2008).…”
Section: Continuous Culturementioning
confidence: 99%