Yeastrgb: Comparing the abundance and localization of yeast proteins across cells and libraries

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Abstract

The ability to measure the abundance and visualize the localization of proteins across the yeast proteome has stimulated hypotheses on gene function and fueled discoveries. While the classic C tagged GFP yeast library has been the only resource for over a decade, the recent development of the SWAT technology has led to the creation of multiple novel yeast libraries where new-generation fluorescent reporters are fused at the N and C of open reading frames. Efficient access to these data requires a user interface to visualize and compare protein abundance, localization and co-localization across cells, strains, and libraries. YeastRGB (www.yeastRGB.org) was designed to address such a need, through a userfriendly interface that maximizes informative content. It employs a compact display where cells are cropped and tiled together into a cell-grid. This representation enables viewing dozens of cells for a particular strain within a display unit, and up to 30 display units can be arrayed on a standard highdefinition screen. Additionally, the display unit allows users to control zoom-level and overlay of images acquired using different color channels. Thus, YeastRGB makes comparing abundance and localization efficient, across thousands of cells from different strains and libraries.

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APA

Dubreuil, B., Sass, E., Nadav, Y., Heidenreich, M., Georgeson, J. M., Weill, U., … Levy, E. D. (2019). Yeastrgb: Comparing the abundance and localization of yeast proteins across cells and libraries. Nucleic Acids Research, 47(D1), D1245–D1249. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gky941

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