Genes in this set(2):

     Std. name     Sys. name     SGDID
     PMT1     YDL095W     S000002253
     PMT3     YOR321W     S000005848

Enriched GO terms in this set:

GO:0003674 (molecular_function)
"Elemental activities, such as catalysis or binding, describing the actions of a gene product at the molecular level. A given gene product may exhibit one or more molecular functions."

    GO:0003824 (catalytic activity)
    "Catalysis of a biochemical reaction at physiological temperatures. In biologically catalyzed reactions, the reactants are known as substrates, and the catalysts are naturally occurring macromolecular substances known as enzymes. Enzymes possess specific binding sites for substrates, and are usually composed wholly or largely of protein, but RNA that has catalytic activity (ribozyme) is often also regarded as enzymatic."

        GO:0016740 (transferase activity)
        "Catalysis of the transfer of a group, e.g. a methyl group, glycosyl group, acyl group, phosphorus-containing, or other groups, from one compound (generally regarded as the donor) to another compound (generally regarded as the acceptor). Transferase is the systematic name for any enzyme of EC class 2."

            GO:0016757 (transferase activity, transferring glycosyl groups)
            "Catalysis of the transfer of a glycosyl group from one compound (donor) to another (acceptor)."

                GO:0016758 (transferase activity, transferring hexosyl groups)
                "Catalysis of the transfer of a hexosyl group from one compound (donor) to another (acceptor)."

                    GO:0000030 (mannosyltransferase activity) [p = 0.009   (2/19: PMT1; PMT3)]
                    "Catalysis of the transfer of a mannosyl group to an acceptor molecule, typically another carbohydrate or a lipid."

                        GO:0004169 (dolichyl-phosphate-mannose-protein mannosyltransferase activity) [p = 0.001   (2/4: PMT1; PMT3)]
                        "Catalysis of the reaction: dolichyl phosphate D-mannose + protein = dolichyl phosphate + O-D-mannosylprotein."

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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:0043170 (macromolecule metabolic process)
        "The chemical reactions and pathways involving macromolecules, large molecules including proteins, nucleic acids and carbohydrates."

            GO:0043283 (biopolymer metabolic process)
            "The chemical reactions and pathways involving biopolymers, long, repeating chains of monomers found in nature e.g. polysaccharides and proteins."

                GO:0043412 (biopolymer modification)
                "The covalent alteration of one or more monomeric units in a polypeptide, polynucleotide, polysaccharide, or other biological polymer, resulting in a change in its properties."

                    GO:0006464 (protein modification process)
                    "The covalent alteration of one or more amino acids occurring in proteins, peptides and nascent polypeptides (co-translational, post-translational modifications). Includes the modification of charged tRNAs that are destined to occur in a protein (pre-translation modification)."

                        GO:0006486 (protein amino acid glycosylation)
                        "The addition of a sugar unit to a protein amino acid, e.g. the addition of glycan chains to proteins."

                            GO:0006493 (protein amino acid O-linked glycosylation) [p = 0.001   (2/6: PMT1; PMT3)]
                            "The formation of O-glycans by addition of glycosyl groups either to the hydroxyl group of peptidyl-serine, peptidyl-threonine, peptidyl-hydroxylysine, or peptidyl-hydroxyproline, or to the phenol group of peptidyl-tyrosine."

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