Genes in this set(7):
Std. name | Sys. name | SGDID |
RPL27A | YHR010W | S000001052 |
BUD27 | YFL023W | S000001871 |
RAD57 | YDR004W | S000002411 |
RAD55 | YDR076W | S000002483 |
XRS2 | YDR369C | S000002777 |
DOC1 | YGL240W | S000003209 |
| YPR116W | S000006320 |
Enriched GO terms in this set:
GO:0008150 (biological_process)
"Those processes specifically pertinent to the functioning of integrated living units: cells, tissues, organs, and organisms. A process is a collection of molecular events with a defined beginning and end."
GO:0009987 (cellular process)
"Processes that are carried out at the cellular level, but are not necessarily restricted to a single cell. For example, cell communication occurs among more than one cell, but occurs at the cellular level."
GO:0044237 (cellular metabolic process)
"The chemical reactions and pathways by which individual cells transform chemical substances."
GO:0006139 (nucleobase, nucleoside, nucleotide and nucleic acid metabolic process)
"The chemical reactions and pathways involving nucleobases, nucleosides, nucleotides and nucleic acids."
GO:0006259 (DNA metabolic process)
"The chemical reactions and pathways involving DNA, deoxyribonucleic acid, one of the two main types of nucleic acid, consisting of a long, unbranched macromolecule formed from one, or more commonly, two, strands of linked deoxyribonucleotides."
GO:0006310 (DNA recombination)
"The processes by which a new genotype is formed by reassortment of genes resulting in gene combinations different from those that were present in the parents. In eukaryotes genetic recombination can occur by chromosome assortment, intrachromosomal recombination, or nonreciprocal interchromosomal recombination. Intrachromosomal recombination occurs by crossing over. In bacteria it may occur by genetic transformation, conjugation, transduction, or F-duction."
GO:0006311 (meiotic gene conversion) [p = 0.006 (3/7: RAD57; RAD55; XRS2)]
"The cell cycle process whereby genetic information is transferred from one helix to another. It often occurs in association with general genetic recombination events, and is believed to be a straightforward consequence of the mechanisms of general recombination and DNA repair. For example, meiosis might yield three copies of the maternal version of an allele and only one copy of the paternal allele, indicating that one of the two copies of the paternal allele has been changed to a copy of the maternal allele."
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