Search term(s): GO:1900543
Here you see a subgraph of the complete GO graph, with your query GO:1900543 as the highest hiearchical level and all levels of lower hierarchy. The number of PDB entries, for which a UniProt entry annotated with the corresponding GO term is available, is shown in square brackets for all hiearchical levels of the subgraph.
negative regulation of purine nucleotide metabolic process (
GO:1900543)
negative regulation of ATP metabolic process (
GO:1903579)
[2 PDB entries]
negative regulation of ATP biosynthetic process (
GO:2001170)
[4 PDB entries]
negative regulation of glucose catabolic process to lactate via pyruvate (
GO:1904024)
[9 PDB entries]
negative regulation of glycolytic fermentation to ethanol (
GO:2001155)
negative regulation of oxidative phosphorylation (
GO:0090324)
[48 PDB entries]
negative regulation of mitochondrial ATP synthesis coupled electron transport (
GO:1905447)
negative regulation of mitochondrial ATP synthesis coupled proton transport (
GO:1905707)
negative regulation of isopentenyl diphosphate biosynthetic process, mevalonate pathway (
GO:2001211)
negative regulation of purine nucleotide biosynthetic process (
GO:1900372)
negative regulation of purine nucleotide catabolic process (
GO:0033122)
negative regulation of butyryl-CoA catabolic process to butanol (
GO:1900498)
negative regulation of butyryl-CoA catabolic process to butyrate (
GO:1900501)
negative regulation of tetrapyrrole biosynthetic process from glycine and succinyl-CoA (
GO:1901414)
Click on the GO accession number to get a tree view of the GO hierarchy without information on PDB entries. In this case your query level and all levels of higher hierarchy up to the root level Gene_Ontology (GO:0003673) are displayed.
If you enter the GO tree somewhere and if you want to get a view of the whole tree first click on the GO name. This yields the low-hierarchy part. Then click on the GO accession number of the lowest hierarchical level. This gives a view of the complete tree. Note, that certain GO terms belong to more than one path.
GO2PDB@JenaLib
Tue Jul 9 10:48:17 2019