All terms in GO
| Label | Id | Description |
|---|---|---|
| protein localization to cytoskeleton | GO_0044380 | [A process in which a protein is transported to, or maintained in, a location within the cytoskeleton.] |
| protein localization to organelle | GO_0033365 | [A process in which a protein is transported to, or maintained in, a location within an organelle.] |
| glucose import in response to insulin stimulus | GO_0044381 | [The directed movement of the hexose monosaccharide glucose into a cell as a result of an insulin stimulus.] |
| glucose import | GO_0046323 | [The directed movement of the hexose monosaccharide glucose into a cell or organelle.] |
| cellular response to insulin stimulus | GO_0032869 | [Any process that results in a change in state or activity of a cell (in terms of movement, secretion, enzyme production, gene expression, etc.) as a result of an insulin stimulus. Insulin is a polypeptide hormone produced by the islets of Langerhans of the pancreas in mammals, and by the homologous organs of other organisms.] |
| CLRC ubiquitin ligase complex localization to heterochromatin | GO_0044382 | [The process by which a CLRC ubiquitin ligase complex is transported to, or maintained in, heterochromatin. CLRC ubiquitin ligase complex is an active cullin-dependent E3 ubiquitin ligase complex essential for heterochromatin assembly by RNAi and histone H3K9 methylation.] |
| protein localization to heterochromatin | GO_0097355 | [Any process in which a protein is transported to, or maintained at, a part of a chromosome that is organized into heterochromatin.] |
| cellular protein-containing complex localization | GO_0034629 | [A protein complex localization process that takes place at the cellular level; as a result, a protein complex is transported to, or maintained in, a specific location within a cell.] |
| host chromosome | GO_0044383 | [A structure composed of a very long molecule of DNA and associated proteins (e.g. histones) that carries hereditary information, occurring within a host cell.] |
| host intracellular organelle | GO_0033647 | [Organized structure of distinctive morphology and function, occurring within the host cell. Includes the nucleus, mitochondria, plastids, vacuoles, vesicles, ribosomes and the cytoskeleton. Excludes the plasma membrane. The host is defined as the larger of the organisms involved in a symbiotic interaction.] |
| positive regulation of necrotic cell death | GO_0010940 | [Any process that increases the rate, frequency or extent of necrotic cell death. Necrotic cell death is a cell death process that is morphologically characterized by a gain in cell volume (oncosis), swelling of organelles, plasma membrane rupture and subsequent loss of intracellular contents.] |
| regulation of necrotic cell death | GO_0010939 | [Any process that modulates the rate, frequency or extent of necrotic cell death. Necrotic cell death is a cell death process that is morphologically characterized by a gain in cell volume (oncosis), swelling of organelles, plasma membrane rupture and subsequent loss of intracellular contents.] |
| positive regulation of cell death | GO_0010942 | [Any process that increases the rate or frequency of cell death. Cell death is the specific activation or halting of processes within a cell so that its vital functions markedly cease, rather than simply deteriorating gradually over time, which culminates in cell death.] |
| necrotic cell death | GO_0070265 | [A type of cell death that is morphologically characterized by an increasingly translucent cytoplasm, swelling of organelles, minor ultrastructural modifications of the nucleus (specifically, dilatation of the nuclear membrane and condensation of chromatin into small, irregular, circumscribed patches) and increased cell volume (oncosis), culminating in the disruption of the plasma membrane and subsequent loss of intracellular contents. Necrotic cells do not fragment into discrete corpses as their apoptotic counterparts do. Moreover, their nuclei remain intact and can aggregate and accumulate in necrotic tissues.] |
| anterior/posterior pattern specification | GO_0009952 | [The regionalization process in which specific areas of cell differentiation are determined along the anterior-posterior axis. The anterior-posterior axis is defined by a line that runs from the head or mouth of an organism to the tail or opposite end of the organism.] |
| regionalization | GO_0003002 | [The pattern specification process that results in the subdivision of an axis or axes in space to define an area or volume in which specific patterns of cell differentiation will take place or in which cells interpret a specific environment.] |
| dorsal/ventral pattern formation | GO_0009953 | [The regionalization process in which the areas along the dorsal/ventral axis are established that will lead to differences in cell differentiation. The dorsal/ventral axis is defined by a line that runs orthogonal to both the anterior/posterior and left/right axes. The dorsal end is defined by the upper or back side of an organism. The ventral end is defined by the lower or front side of an organism.] |
| dorsal/ventral axis specification | GO_0009950 | [The establishment, maintenance and elaboration of the dorsal/ventral axis. The dorsal/ventral axis is defined by a line that runs orthogonal to both the anterior/posterior and left/right axes. The dorsal end is defined by the upper or back side of an organism. The ventral end is defined by the lower or front side of an organism.] |
| axis specification | GO_0009798 | [The establishment, maintenance and elaboration of a pattern along a line or around a point.] |
| polarity specification of dorsal/ventral axis | GO_0009951 | [Any process resulting in the establishment of polarity along the dorsal/ventral axis.] |