All terms in GO
| Label | Id | Description |
|---|---|---|
| lactose catabolic process | GO_0005990 | [The chemical reactions and pathways resulting in the breakdown of lactose, the disaccharide galactopyranosyl-glucose.] |
| lactose catabolic process, using glucoside 3-dehydrogenase | GO_0019513 | [The chemical reactions and pathways resulting in the breakdown of lactose, catalyzed by the enzyme glucoside 3-dehydrogenase (EC:1.1.99.13).] |
| obsolete lactose hydrolysis | GO_0019514 | [OBSOLETE. (Was not defined before being made obsolete).] |
| lactose catabolic process via UDP-galactose | GO_0019515 | [The chemical reactions and pathways resulting in the breakdown of lactose, via the intermediate UDP-galactose.] |
| lactate oxidation | GO_0019516 | [The chemical reactions and pathways resulting in the conversion of lactate to other compounds, such as pyruvate, with concomitant loss of electrons.] |
| L-threonine catabolic process to D-lactate | GO_0019517 | [The chemical reactions and pathways resulting in the breakdown of L- threonine (the L-enantiomer of 2-amino-3-hydroxybutyric acid) to form the compound methylglyoxal, which is subsequently converted to D-lactate.] |
| threonine catabolic process | GO_0006567 | [The chemical reactions and pathways resulting in the breakdown of threonine (2-amino-3-hydroxybutyric acid), a polar, uncharged, essential amino acid found in peptide linkage in proteins.] |
| L-threonine catabolic process to glycine | GO_0019518 | [The chemical reactions and pathways resulting in the breakdown of L-threonine (the L-enantiomer of 2-amino-3-hydroxybutyric acid) to form to form 2-amino-3-oxobutanoate, which is subsequently converted to glycine.] |
| glycine metabolic process | GO_0006544 | [The chemical reactions and pathways involving glycine, aminoethanoic acid.] |
| pentitol metabolic process | GO_0019519 | [The chemical reactions and pathways involving pentitols, any alditol with a chain of five carbon atoms in the molecule.] |
| alditol metabolic process | GO_0019400 | [The chemical reactions and pathways involving alditols, any polyhydric alcohol derived from the acyclic form of a monosaccharide by reduction of its aldehyde or keto group to an alcoholic group.] |
| aldonic acid metabolic process | GO_0019520 | [The chemical reactions and pathways involving aldonic acid, a monocarboxylic acid with a chain of three or more carbon atoms, derived from an aldose by oxidation of the aldehydic group.] |
| cellular carbohydrate metabolic process | GO_0044262 | [The chemical reactions and pathways involving carbohydrates, any of a group of organic compounds based of the general formula Cx(H2O)y, as carried out by individual cells.] |
| D-gluconate metabolic process | GO_0019521 | [The chemical reactions and pathways involving D-gluconate, the anion of D-gluconic acid, the aldonic acid derived from glucose.] |
| ketogluconate metabolic process | GO_0019522 | [The chemical reactions and pathways involving ketogluconate, the anion of ketogluconic acid, an aldonic acid derived from glucose containing a ketonic carbonyl group.] |
| L-idonate metabolic process | GO_0019523 | [The chemical reactions and pathways involving L-idonate, the anion of idonic acid, an aldonic acid derived from L-idose, an aldohexose which is epimeric with D-glucose.] |
| keto-D-gluconate catabolic process | GO_0019524 | [The chemical reactions and pathways resulting in the breakdown of keto-D-gluconate, the anion of keto-D-gluconic acid, an aldonic acid derived from glucose.] |
| ketogluconate catabolic process | GO_0046181 | [The chemical reactions and pathways resulting in the breakdown of ketogluconate, the anion of ketogluconic acid, an aldonic acid derived from glucose containing a ketonic carbonyl group.] |
| keto-D-gluconate metabolic process | GO_0019525 | [The chemical reactions and pathways involving keto-D-gluconate, the anion of keto-D-gluconic acid, an aldonic acid derived from glucose.] |
| pentitol biosynthetic process | GO_0019526 | [The chemical reactions and pathways resulting in the formation of pentitols, any alditol with a chain of five carbon atoms in the molecule.] |