17 Parents
Identifier | Name | Description |
---|---|---|
GO:0032991 | protein-containing complex | A stable assembly of two or more macromolecules, i.e. proteins, nucleic acids, carbohydrates or lipids, in which at least one component is a protein and the constituent parts function together. |
GO:0005575 | cellular_component | A location, relative to cellular compartments and structures, occupied by a macromolecular machine. There are three types of cellular components described in the gene ontology: (1) the cellular anatomical entity where a gene product carries out a molecular function (e.g., plasma membrane, cytoskeleton) or membrane-enclosed compartments (e.g., mitochondrion); (2) virion components, where viral proteins act, and (3) the stable macromolecular complexes of which gene product are parts (e.g., the clathrin complex). |
GO:0110165 | cellular anatomical structure | A part of a cellular organism consisting of a material entity with granularity above the level of a protein complex but below that of an anatomical system. Note that cellular organisms exclude viruses. |
GO:0043227 | membrane-bounded organelle | Organized structure of distinctive morphology and function, bounded by a single or double lipid bilayer membrane. Includes the nucleus, mitochondria, plastids, vacuoles, and vesicles. Excludes the plasma membrane. |
GO:0043226 | organelle | Organized structure of distinctive morphology and function. Includes the nucleus, mitochondria, plastids, vacuoles, vesicles, ribosomes and the cytoskeleton, and prokaryotic structures such as anammoxosomes and pirellulosomes. Excludes the plasma membrane. |
GO:0005576 | extracellular region | The space external to the outermost structure of a cell. For cells without external protective or external encapsulating structures this refers to space outside of the plasma membrane. This term covers the host cell environment outside an intracellular parasite. |
GO:0018995 | host cellular component | Any cellular component of a host cell. The host is an organism in which another organism, for instance a parasite or symbiont, spends part or all of its life cycle and from which it obtains nourishment and/or protection. |
GO:0033643 | host cell part | Any constituent part of a host cell. The host is defined as the larger of the organisms involved in a symbiotic interaction. |
GO:0043656 | host intracellular region | That space within the plasma membrane of a host cell. |
GO:0033646 | host intracellular part | Any constituent part of the living contents of a host cell; the matter contained within (but not including) the plasma membrane, usually taken to exclude large vacuoles and masses of secretory or ingested material. In eukaryotes it includes the nucleus and cytoplasm. The host is defined as the larger of the organisms involved in a symbiotic interaction. |
GO:0065010 | extracellular membrane-bounded organelle | Organized structure of distinctive morphology and function, bounded by a lipid bilayer membrane and occurring outside the cell. |
GO:0020003 | symbiont-containing vacuole | Membrane-bounded vacuole within a host cell in which a symbiont organism resides. The vacuole membrane is derived from both the host and symbiont. |
GO:0033655 | host cell cytoplasm part | Any constituent part of the host cell cytoplasm, all of the contents of a cell excluding the plasma membrane and nucleus, but including other subcellular structures. The host is defined as the larger of the organisms involved in a symbiotic interaction. |
GO:0030430 | host cell cytoplasm | The cytoplasm of a host cell. |
GO:0043230 | extracellular organelle | Organized structure of distinctive morphology and function, occurring outside the cell. Includes, for example, extracellular membrane vesicles (EMVs) and the cellulosomes of anaerobic bacteria and fungi. |
GO:0020005 | symbiont-containing vacuole membrane | The lipid bilayer surrounding a symbiont-containing vacuole, derived from both the host and symbiont. |
GO:0097619 | PTEX complex | A protein complex that acts as a protein trafficking machinery and is responsible for the export of proteins across the parasitophorous (symbiont-containing) vacuolar membrane and into the human host cell. The PTEX complex is located in the vacuole membrane. It is ATP-powered, and comprises heat shock protein 101 (HSP101; a ClpA/B-like ATPase from the AAA+ superfamily, of a type commonly associated with protein translocons), a parasite protein termed PTEX150, and exported protein 2 (EXP2). EXP2 is the potential channel, as it is the membrane-associated component of the core PTEX complex. Two other proteins, PTEX88 and thioredoxin 2 (TRX2), were also identified as PTEX components. |
17 Relations
Relationship |
Parent Term . Identifier |
Child Term . Identifier |
---|---|---|
part of | GO:0020005 | GO:0097619 |
is_a | GO:0032991 | GO:0097619 |
part of | GO:0043227 | GO:0097619 |
part of | GO:0043656 | GO:0097619 |
part of | GO:0043226 | GO:0097619 |
part of | GO:0018995 | GO:0097619 |
is_a | GO:0005575 | GO:0097619 |
part of | GO:0020003 | GO:0097619 |
part of | GO:0005575 | GO:0097619 |
part of | GO:0005576 | GO:0097619 |
part of | GO:0110165 | GO:0097619 |
part of | GO:0043230 | GO:0097619 |
part of | GO:0065010 | GO:0097619 |
part of | GO:0030430 | GO:0097619 |
part of | GO:0033655 | GO:0097619 |
part of | GO:0033643 | GO:0097619 |
part of | GO:0033646 | GO:0097619 |