Genes in this set(17):

     Std. name     Sys. name     SGDID
     SWD1     YAR003W     S000000064
      YBR099C     S000000303
      YBR174C     S000000378
     SLX1     YBR228W     S000000432
     SRO9     YCL037C     S000000542
     NMD2     YHR077C     S000001119
     RPN4     YDL020C     S000002178
     RNH202     YDR279W     S000002687
      YGR071C     S000003303
     UPF3     YGR072W     S000003304
     SWI3     YJL176C     S000003712
     SLX4     YLR135W     S000004125
     VID22     YLR373C     S000004365
     NAM7     YMR080C     S000004685
     INP52     YNL106C     S000005050
     SKI7     YOR076C     S000005602
     ULS1     YOR191W     S000005717

Enriched GO terms in this set:

GO:0005575 (cellular_component)
"The part of a cell or its extracellular environment in which a gene product is located. A gene product may be located in one or more parts of a cell and its location may be as specific as a particular macromolecular complex, that is, a stable, persistent association of macromolecules that function together."

    GO:0044464 (cell part)
    "Any constituent part of a cell, the basic structural and functional unit of all organisms."

        GO:0044424 (intracellular part)
        "Any constituent part of the living contents of a 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."

            GO:0030529 (ribonucleoprotein complex)
            "A macromolecular complex containing both protein and RNA molecules."

                GO:0005844 (polysome) [p < 0.001   (4/4: SRO9; NMD2; UPF3; NAM7)]
                "Several ribosomes bound to one mRNA."

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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:0008152 (metabolic process)
    "Processes that cause many of the chemical changes in living organisms, including anabolism and catabolism. Metabolic processes typically transform small molecules, but also include macromolecular processes such as DNA repair and replication, and protein synthesis and degradation."

        GO:0009056 (catabolic process)
        "The chemical reactions and pathways resulting in the breakdown of substances, including the breakdown of carbon compounds with the liberation of energy for use by the cell or organism."

            GO:0009057 (macromolecule catabolic process)
            "The chemical reactions and pathways resulting in the breakdown of a macromolecule, any large molecule including proteins, nucleic acids and carbohydrates."

                GO:0044265 (cellular macromolecule catabolic process)
                "The chemical reactions and pathways resulting in the breakdown of a macromolecule, any large molecule including proteins, nucleic acids and carbohydrates, as carried out by individual cells."

                    GO:0006401 (RNA catabolic process) [p = 0.001   (4/10: NMD2; UPF3; NAM7; SKI7)]
                    "The chemical reactions and pathways resulting in the breakdown of RNA, ribonucleic acid, one of the two main type of nucleic acid, consisting of a long, unbranched macromolecule formed from ribonucleotides joined in 3',5'-phosphodiester linkage."

                        GO:0006402 (mRNA catabolic process) [p = 0.001   (4/9: NMD2; UPF3; NAM7; SKI7)]
                        "The chemical reactions and pathways resulting in the breakdown of mRNA, messenger RNA, which is responsible for carrying the coded genetic 'message', transcribed from DNA, to sites of protein assembly at the ribosomes."

                            GO:0000184 (mRNA catabolic process, nonsense-mediated decay) [p = 0.001   (3/3: NMD2; UPF3; NAM7)]
                            "The nonsense-mediated mRNA decay pathway degrades mRNAs transcribed from genes in which an amino-acid codon has changed to a nonsense codon; this prevents the translation of such mRNAs into truncated, and potentially harmful, proteins."

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