Vaccine Ontology / 疫苗本体

Last uploaded: September 7, 2023
Preferred Name

protein complex

Synonyms

protein-protein complex

Definitions

A stable macromolecular complex composed (only) of two or more polypeptide subunits along with any covalently attached molecules (such as lipid anchors or oligosaccharide) or non-protein prosthetic groups (such as nucleotides or metal ions). Prosthetic group in this context refers to a tightly bound cofactor. The component polypeptide subunits may be identical. A protein complex in this context is meant as a stable set of interacting proteins which can be co-purified by an acceptable method, and where the complex has been shown to exist as an isolated, functional unit in vivo. Acceptable experimental methods include stringent protein purification followed by detection of protein interaction. The following methods should be considered non-acceptable: simple immunoprecipitation, pull-down experiments from cell extracts without further purification, colocalization and 2-hybrid screening. Interactions that should not be captured as protein complexes include: 1) enzyme/substrate, receptor/ligand or any similar transient interactions, unless these are a critical part of the complex assembly or are required e.g. for the receptor to be functional; 2) proteins associated in a pull-down/co-immunoprecipitation assay with no functional link or any evidence that this is a defined biological entity rather than a loose-affinity complex; 3) any complex where the only evidence is based on genetic interaction data; 4) partial complexes, where some subunits (e.g. transmembrane ones) cannot be expressed as recombinant proteins and are excluded from experiments (in this case, independent evidence is necessary to find out the composition of the full complex, if known). Interactions that may be captured as protein complexes include: 1) enzyme/substrate or receptor/ligand if the complex can only assemble and become functional in the presence of both classes of subunits; 2) complexes where one of the members has not been shown to be physically linked to the other(s), but is a homologue of, and has the same functionality as, a protein that has been experimentally demonstrated to form a complex with the other member(s); 3) complexes whose existence is accepted based on localization and pharmacological studies, but for which experimental evidence is not yet available for the complex as a whole.

ID

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/GO_0043234

comment

A protein complex in this context is meant as a stable set of interacting proteins which can be co-purified by an acceptable method, and where the complex has been shown to exist as an isolated, functional unit in vivo. Acceptable experimental methods include stringent protein purification followed by detection of protein interaction. The following methods should be considered non-acceptable: simple immunoprecipitation, pull-down experiments from cell extracts without further purification, colocalization and 2-hybrid screening. Interactions that should not be captured as protein complexes include: 1) enzyme/substrate, receptor/ligand or any similar transient interactions, unless these are a critical part of the complex assembly or are required e.g. for the receptor to be functional; 2) proteins associated in a pull-down/co-immunoprecipitation assay with no functional link or any evidence that this is a defined biological entity rather than a loose-affinity complex; 3) any complex where the only evidence is based on genetic interaction data; 4) partial complexes, where some subunits (e.g. transmembrane ones) cannot be expressed as recombinant proteins and are excluded from experiments (in this case, independent evidence is necessary to find out the composition of the full complex, if known). Interactions that may be captured as protein complexes include: 1) enzyme/substrate or receptor/ligand if the complex can only assemble and become functional in the presence of both classes of subunits; 2) complexes where one of the members has not been shown to be physically linked to the other(s), but is a homologue of, and has the same functionality as, a protein that has been experimentally demonstrated to form a complex with the other member(s); 3) complexes whose existence is accepted based on localization and pharmacological studies, but for which experimental evidence is not yet available for the complex as a whole.

database_cross_reference

Wikipedia:Protein_complex

definition

A stable macromolecular complex composed (only) of two or more polypeptide subunits along with any covalently attached molecules (such as lipid anchors or oligosaccharide) or non-protein prosthetic groups (such as nucleotides or metal ions). Prosthetic group in this context refers to a tightly bound cofactor. The component polypeptide subunits may be identical.

has_exact_synonym

protein-protein complex

has_obo_namespace

cellular_component

id

GO:0043234

imported from

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/go.owl

http://purl.org/obo/owl/molecular_function

in_subset

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/go#goslim_pir

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/go#goslim_generic

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/go#gosubset_prok

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/go#goslim_chembl

label

protein complex

notation

GO:0043234

prefLabel

protein complex

subClassOf

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/BFO_0000040

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Delete Mapping To Ontology Source
http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/MI_0315 Molecular Interactions Controlled Vocabulary / 分子间相互作用的受控词表 LOOM
http://semanticscience.org/resource/SIO_010497 Semanticscience Integrated Ontology / 语义科学集成本体 LOOM
http://purl.org/sig/ont/fma/fma67906 Foundational Model of Anatomy / 解剖学基础模型本体 LOOM
http://edamontology.org/data_2877 Bioscientific data analysis ontology / 生物科学数据分析本体 LOOM
http://www.bioassayontology.org/bao#BAO_0002554 BioAssay Ontology / 生物活性分析本体 LOOM
http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/GO_0043234 Gene Ontology / 基因本体 SAME_URI
http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/GO_0043234 细胞系本体(中文翻译) / Cell Line Ontology (Chinese Translation) SAME_URI