News & Highlights: Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome (HGPS) is a rare and fatal disease characterized by premature aging. In their recent collaboration, YRC researcher John Yates and collaborator Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte found induced pluripotent stem cells from HGPS patients lacked molecular characteristics associated with the disease, which were restored upon differentiation. See their paper in Nature to learn more. [Read Article]
News & Highlights: YRC researcher Stan Fields used the model organism Saccharomyces cerevisiae to probe the effects of nutritionally acquired metabolites on statins, a cholesterol-lowering drug widely prescribed to prevent heart disease. He found that copper and zinc ions impair the effect of statins by upregulating genes related to sterol production. Please read his paper in Molecular BioSystems to learn more. [Read Article]
News & Highlights: YRC researchers David Baker and Stan Fields have developed new technology for examining how a protein's sequence affects its function. This new technology is large-scale and may be applied to many in vitro or in vivo protein assays, providing a general means for studying the functional consequences of protein variation. Please read their paper in Nature Methods to learn more. [Read Article]
News & Highlights: The YRC collaborated with Sue Biggins at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle to examine centromeres, whose proper function is critical to prevent conditions associated with cancer and some birth defects. This work, performed in yeast, was recently published in Molecular Cell, where Dr. Biggins proposes a new pathway for the regulation of centromeric function. [Read Article]
News & Highlights: Multidimensional protein identification technology (MudPIT) developed by the YRC was used in a recent collaboration with David Drubin at the University of California, Berkeley, to examine the assembly of actin networks in yeast. In his recent paper in Current Biology, Dr. Drubin describes the nucleation and assembly of these large protein complexes, and how MudPIT was used to characterize their composition. [Read Article]

Collaborate with the YRC

Before Submitting a Proposal

Review the collaboration policies. NOTE: Mass spec data will be released upon publication.
We are looking for collaborations that use or extend technologies described on this web site. We particularly encourage studies that combine the use of more than one technology. Please include 1) a brief background of the project and 2) a short justification. Ideally, the application should be accompanied by preliminary data when available. Unpublished results which support the justification will be kept confidential. Applications will be considered on a rolling basis, and for collaborations that are accepted by the YRC, a priority list is established.

How To Submit a Proposal

All collaboration requests should be submitted through our collaborators' website.
Returning collaborators may log in to the left or by clicking here.
New collaborators may register with our website here.