The success of the original yeast two-hybrid system has stimulated the development of a number of 'hybrid technologies' in yeast (and now prokaryotes and mammals) to widen the scope of the protein-protein interactions that can be analyzed, and to enable comparable studies of the interactions of proteins with DNA, RNA or small chemical ligands. In addition, the application of the two-hybrid system to entire genomes is being used to create protein linkage maps which catalog the network of interactions of an organism's complete proteome.