Your browser is unable to support new features implemented in HTML5 and CSS3 to render this site as intended. Your experience may suffer from functionality degradation but the site should remain usable. We strongly recommend the latest version of Google Chrome, OS X Safari or Mozilla Firefox. As Safari is bundled with OS X, if you are unable to upgrade to a newer version of OS X, we recommend using an open source browser. Dismiss message
Field | Value |
---|---|
Gene ID | Lj0g3v0257719 |
Transcript ID | Lj0g3v0257719.1 |
Related isoforms 1 | |
Lotus japonicus genome version | MG20 v3.0 |
Description | DNA glycosylase superfamily protein [Arabidopsis thaliana] gi|42572315|ref|NP_974253.1| |
Working Lj name | n.a. |
Data for domain prediction are obtained with InterProScan, and merged with InterPro data obtained from the EB-eye REST service.
Prediction algorithm | Identifier | Start | End | Length | E-value | InterPro ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
MobiDBLite | 1 | 23 | 23 | – | – | |
PANTHER | 39 | 200 | 162 | 2.50E-54 | – | |
Gene3D | 58 | 199 | 142 | 2.20E-33 | ||
SUPERFAMILY | 72 | 184 | 113 | 5.18E-22 | ||
Pfam | 89 | 202 | 114 | 4.80E-05 |
GO predictions are based solely on the InterPro-to-GO mappings published by EMBL-EBI, which are in turn based on the mapping of predicted domains to the InterPro dataset. The InterPro-to-GO mapping was last updated on , while the GO metadata was last updated on .
GO term | Namespace | Name | Definition | Relationships |
---|---|---|---|---|
Molecular function | 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. | ||
Biological process | DNA repair | The process of restoring DNA after damage. Genomes are subject to damage by chemical and physical agents in the environment (e.g. UV and ionizing radiations, chemical mutagens, fungal and bacterial toxins, etc.) and by free radicals or alkylating agents endogenously generated in metabolism. DNA is also damaged because of errors during its replication. A variety of different DNA repair pathways have been reported that include direct reversal, base excision repair, nucleotide excision repair, photoreactivation, bypass, double-strand break repair pathway, and mismatch repair pathway. | ||
Biological process | Base-excision repair | In base excision repair, an altered base is removed by a DNA glycosylase enzyme, followed by excision of the resulting sugar phosphate. The small gap left in the DNA helix is filled in by the sequential action of DNA polymerase and DNA ligase. |
Expression pattern of Lj0g3v0257719.1, powered by ExpAt. For advanced configuration, data transformation and export options, view expression data in the ExpAt application.
Loading expression data from ljgea-geneid. Please wait…
A list of the top 25 highly co-expressed genes of Lj0g3v0257719.1, powered by CORGI.
Loading co-expressed genes from the dataset ljgea-geneid. This will take 20–30 seconds to construct.