Human-Yeast Hybrids: New Visions to Genetic Disorders and Drug Discovery

Iranian biomedical journal(2017)

Cited 23|Views11
No score
Abstract
Yeast has been a very helpful organism for centuries, especially with respect to fermentation of sugars and production of bread. However, for an even longer time, yeast has been a distant relative of humans having diverged from a common ancestor, about one billion years ago. More than one third of the yeast genes have human counterparts, despite this evolutionary distance. Yeast and human orthologs perform the same or similar functions. Investigations have demonstrated that 9-92% of the amino acid sequences in similar human and yeast proteins overlap. However, even if two genes perform similar functions in two different organisms, it may not be possible to replace some of yeast genes with their human counterpart...
More
Translated text
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined