ENS2 Gene Ontology Annotations Help

This page displays GO annotations in different sections according to the annotation method used to add that annotation to SGD.

ENS2 Manually curated*:

Last Reviewed on: 2008-04-07    Molecular Function | Biological Process | Cellular Component

Manually curated Molecular Function
Annotation(s) Evidence Reference(s) Assigned By
endodeoxyribonuclease activity IDA: Inferred from Direct Assay
Assigned on 2003-03-04
Mizumura H, et al.  (1999) Stable association of 70-kDa heat shock protein induces latent multisite specificity of a unisite-specific endonuclease in yeast mitochondria. J Biol Chem 274(36):25682-90 SGD

Manually curated Biological Process
Annotation(s) Evidence Reference(s) Assigned By
DNA recombination IMP: Inferred from Mutant Phenotype
Assigned on 2003-03-04
Nakagawa K, et al.  (1992) An endonuclease with multiple cutting sites, Endo.SceI, initiates genetic recombination at its cutting site in yeast mitochondria. EMBO J 11(7):2707-15 SGD

Manually curated Cellular Component
Annotation(s) Evidence Reference(s) Assigned By
mitochondrion IDA: Inferred from Direct Assay
Assigned on 2003-03-04
Nakagawa K, et al.  (1991) A maturase-like subunit of the sequence-specific endonuclease endo.SceI from yeast mitochondria. J Biol Chem 266(3):1977-84 SGD

* Manually curated GO annotations reflect our best understanding of the basic molecular function, biological process, and cellular component for this gene product. Manually curated annotations are assigned by SGD curators based on published papers when available, or by curatorial statements if necessary. Curators periodically review all Manually curated GO annotations for accuracy and completeness. The "Last Reviewed on:" date at the top of this section indicates when these annotations were last reviewed.


ENS2 High-throughput**:


There are no High-throughput annotations for ENS2

** GO annotations from High-throughput experiments are made based on a variety of large scale high-throughput experiments, including genome-wide experiments. Many of these annotations are made based on GO annotations (or mappings to GO annotations) assigned by the authors, rather than SGD curators. While SGD curators read these publications and often work closely with authors to incorporate the information, each individual annotation may not necessarily be reviewed by a curator. GO Annotations from high-throughput experiments will be assigned only when this type of data is available, and thus may not be assigned in all three aspects of the Gene Ontologies.


ENS2 Computational***:


There are no Computational annotations for ENS2

*** Computational GO Annotations are predictions. These annotations are NOT reviewed by a curator. Currently, all computational GO annotations for S. cerevisiae are assigned by an external source (for example, the Gene Ontology Annotation (GOA) project of the European Bioinformatics Institute (EBI)).