Ontology: Cellular Component (GO:0016471)
Definition: A proton-transporting two-sector ATPase complex found in the vacuolar membrane, where it acts as a proton pump to mediate acidification of the vacuolar lumen.
Synonyms: vacuolar hydrogen-translocating V-type ATPase complex
View Ontology:
(graph) |
(text)
Definition: A proton-transporting two-sector ATPase complex found in the vacuolar membrane, where it acts as a proton pump to mediate acidification of the vacuolar lumen.
Synonyms: vacuolar hydrogen-translocating V-type ATPase complex
View Ontology:
(graph) |
This table lists the methods used to annotate genes either directly to the term
vacuolar proton-transporting V-type ATPase complex (1 gene)
or to its variants containing one or more
qualifiers (0 genes). Note that some genes may have been annotated by more than one method so the numbers in the table below may not add up to the totals given here.
Links to Additional Annotations:
| Annotation Method | GO Term | # Yeast Genes Annotated |
|---|---|---|
| Manually curated | none | none |
| High-throughput | none | none |
| Computational (download data) | vacuolar proton-transporting V-type ATPase complex | 1 |
Links to Additional Annotations:
- View
annotations in multiple organisms using

- Search for S. cerevisiae genes annotated, by the Manually curated or High-throughput methods, to this term or to any terms that are descended from this term, i.e., child terms representing more specific biology than this term.
Annotation details for genes that have been directly annotated to the term
vacuolar proton-transporting V-type ATPase complex or its variants containing one or more
qualifiers (NOT, contributes to, or colocalizes with).
| vacuolar proton-transporting V-type ATPase complex 1 gene directly annotated to this term |
||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Locus | Evidence | Annotation Method | Reference | Assigned By |
| VMA10/YHR039C-A | IEA: Inferred from Electronic Annotation with EBI:IPR005124 Last Updated 2013-03-02 |
computational | DDB, et al. (2001) Gene Ontology annotation through association of InterPro records with GO terms. | InterPro |


