|
GO_0020029
|
GO_0020029 |
|
|
hemoglobin metabolic process
|
GO_0020027 |
[The chemical reactions and pathways involving hemoglobin, including its uptake and utilization.] |
|
endocytic hemoglobin import into cell
|
GO_0020028 |
[The directed movement of hemoglobin into a cell by receptor-mediated endocytosis.] |
|
receptor-mediated endocytosis
|
GO_0006898 |
[An endocytosis process in which cell surface receptors ensure specificity of transport. A specific receptor on the cell surface binds tightly to the extracellular macromolecule (the ligand) that it recognizes; the plasma-membrane region containing the receptor-ligand complex then undergoes endocytosis, forming a transport vesicle containing the receptor-ligand complex and excluding most other plasma-membrane proteins. Receptor-mediated endocytosis generally occurs via clathrin-coated pits and vesicles.] |
|
protein transport
|
GO_0015031 |
[The directed movement of proteins into, out of or within a cell, or between cells, by means of some agent such as a transporter or pore.] |
|
obsolete viral host shutoff protein
|
GO_0019040 |
[OBSOLETE. (Was not defined before being made obsolete).] |
|
chemotaxis to arachidonate
|
GO_0034670 |
[The directed movement of a motile cell or organism in response to the presence of arachidonic acid.] |
|
chemotaxis
|
GO_0006935 |
[The directed movement of a motile cell or organism, or the directed growth of a cell guided by a specific chemical concentration gradient. Movement may be towards a higher concentration (positive chemotaxis) or towards a lower concentration (negative chemotaxis).] |
|
GO_0019041
|
GO_0019041 |
|
|
viral latency
|
GO_0019042 |
[The process by which, after initial infection, a virus lies dormant within a cell and viral production ceases. The process ends when the virus switches from latency and starts to replicate.] |
|
GO_0020021
|
GO_0020021 |
|
|
obsolete viral glycoprotein
|
GO_0019032 |
[OBSOLETE. (Was not defined before being made obsolete).] |
|
viral tegument
|
GO_0019033 |
[A structure lying between the capsid and envelope of a virus, varying in thickness and often distributed asymmetrically.] |
|
acidocalcisome
|
GO_0020022 |
[An electron-dense acidic membrane-bounded organelle which contains a matrix of pyrophosphate and polyphosphates with bound calcium and other cations.] |
|
viral replication complex
|
GO_0019034 |
[Specific locations and structures in the virus infected cell involved in replicating the viral genome.] |
|
food vacuole
|
GO_0020020 |
[Vacuole within a parasite used for digestion of the host cell cytoplasm. An example of this component is found in the Apicomplexa.] |
|
phagolysosome
|
GO_0032010 |
[A membrane-bounded intracellular vesicle formed by maturation of an early phagosome following the ingestion of particulate material by phagocytosis; during maturation, phagosomes acquire markers of late endosomes and lysosomes.] |
|
viral integration complex
|
GO_0019035 |
[A nucleoprotein complex containing viral genetic material and the viral integrase, required for genome integration into the host's genome. May contain other proteins.] |
|
subpellicular microtubule
|
GO_0020025 |
[Singlet microtubule that lie underneath the inner membrane pellicle complex and emanate from the basal ring of the conoid.] |
|
microtubule
|
GO_0005874 |
[Any of the long, generally straight, hollow tubes of internal diameter 12-15 nm and external diameter 24 nm found in a wide variety of eukaryotic cells; each consists (usually) of 13 protofilaments of polymeric tubulin, staggered in such a manner that the tubulin monomers are arranged in a helical pattern on the microtubular surface, and with the alpha/beta axes of the tubulin subunits parallel to the long axis of the tubule; exist in equilibrium with pool of tubulin monomers and can be rapidly assembled or disassembled in response to physiological stimuli; concerned with force generation, e.g. in the spindle.] |