All terms in GO
| Label | Id | Description |
|---|---|---|
| obsolete urinary protein | GO_0005192 | [OBSOLETE. (Was not defined before being made obsolete).] |
| obsolete major urinary protein | GO_0005193 | [OBSOLETE. (Was not defined before being made obsolete).] |
| obsolete cell adhesion molecule activity | GO_0005194 | [OBSOLETE. Mediates the adhesion of the cell to other cells or to the extracellular matrix.] |
| protein import into mitochondrial matrix | GO_0030150 | [The import of proteins across the outer and inner mitochondrial membranes into the matrix. Unfolded proteins enter the mitochondrial matrix with a chaperone protein; the information required to target the precursor protein from the cytosol to the mitochondrial matrix is contained within its N-terminal matrix-targeting sequence. Translocation of precursors to the matrix occurs at the rare sites where the outer and inner membranes are close together.] |
| mitochondrial transmembrane transport | GO_1990542 | [The process in which a solute is transported from one side of a membrane to the other into, out of or within a mitochondrion.] |
| establishment of protein localization to mitochondrion | GO_0072655 | [The directed movement of a protein to the mitochondrion or a part of the mitochondrion.] |
| intracellular protein transmembrane transport | GO_0065002 | [The directed movement of proteins in a cell, from one side of a membrane to another by means of some agent such as a transporter or pore.] |
| protein targeting to mitochondrion | GO_0006626 | [The process of directing proteins towards and into the mitochondrion, usually mediated by mitochondrial proteins that recognize signals contained within the imported protein.] |
| molybdenum ion binding | GO_0030151 | [Interacting selectively and non-covalently with molybdenum (Mo) ions.] |
| transition metal ion binding | GO_0046914 | [Interacting selectively and non-covalently with a transition metal ions; a transition metal is an element whose atom has an incomplete d-subshell of extranuclear electrons, or which gives rise to a cation or cations with an incomplete d-subshell. Transition metals often have more than one valency state. Biologically relevant transition metals include vanadium, manganese, iron, copper, cobalt, nickel, molybdenum and silver.] |
| bacteriocin biosynthetic process | GO_0030152 | [The chemical reactions and pathways resulting in the formation of a bacteriocin, any of a heterogeneous group of polypeptide antibiotics that are secreted by certain bacterial strains and are able to kill cells of other susceptible (frequently related) strains after adsorption at specific receptors on the cell surface. They include the colicins, and their mechanisms of action vary.] |
| bacteriocin metabolic process | GO_0046224 | [The chemical reactions and pathways involving bacteriocins, any of a heterogeneous group of polypeptide antibiotics that are secreted by certain bacterial strains and are able to kill cells of other susceptible (frequently related) strains after adsorption at specific receptors on the cell surface. They include the colicins, and their mechanisms of action vary.] |
| toxin biosynthetic process | GO_0009403 | [The chemical reactions and pathways resulting in the formation of toxin, a poisonous compound (typically a protein) that is produced by cells or organisms and that can cause disease when introduced into the body or tissues of an organism.] |
| peptide antibiotic biosynthetic process | GO_0030651 | [The chemical reactions and pathways resulting in the formation of peptides with antibiotic activity.] |
| bacteriocin immunity | GO_0030153 | [A process that mediates resistance to a bacteriocin: any of a heterogeneous group of polypeptide antibiotics that are secreted by certain bacterial strains and are able to kill cells of other susceptible (frequently related) strains after adsorption at specific receptors on the cell surface. They include the colicins, and their mechanisms of action vary.] |
| toxin metabolic process | GO_0009404 | [The chemical reactions and pathways involving a toxin, a poisonous compound (typically a protein) that is produced by cells or organisms and that can cause disease when introduced into the body or tissues of an organism.] |
| cell differentiation | GO_0030154 | [The process in which relatively unspecialized cells, e.g. embryonic or regenerative cells, acquire specialized structural and/or functional features that characterize the cells, tissues, or organs of the mature organism or some other relatively stable phase of the organism's life history. Differentiation includes the processes involved in commitment of a cell to a specific fate and its subsequent development to the mature state.] |
| cellular developmental process | GO_0048869 | [A biological process whose specific outcome is the progression of a cell over time from an initial condition to a later condition.] |
| structural constituent of cell wall | GO_0005199 | [The action of a molecule that contributes to the structural integrity of a cell wall.] |
| cell wall | GO_0005618 | [The rigid or semi-rigid envelope lying outside the cell membrane of plant, fungal, most prokaryotic cells and some protozoan parasites, maintaining their shape and protecting them from osmotic lysis. In plants it is made of cellulose and, often, lignin; in fungi it is composed largely of polysaccharides; in bacteria it is composed of peptidoglycan; in protozoan parasites such as Giardia species, it's made of carbohydrates and proteins.] |