GO:0007186: G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathway (Biological process)

"The series of molecular signals initiated by a ligand binding to its receptor, in which the activated receptor promotes the exchange of GDP for GTP on the alpha-subunit of an associated heterotrimeric G-protein complex. The GTP-bound activated alpha-G-protein then dissociates from the beta- and gamma-subunits to further transmit the signal within the cell. The pathway begins with receptor-ligand interaction, and ends with regulation of a downstream cellular process. The pathway can start from the plasma membrane, Golgi or nuclear membrane." [GOC:bf, GOC:mah, PMID:16902576, PMID:24568158, Wikipedia:G_protein-coupled_receptor]


There are 7779 sequences with this label.

Enriched clusters
Name Species % in cluster p-value corrected p-value action
Cluster_237 Actinostachys digitata 1.89 % 0.019746 0.048117
Cluster_435 Actinostachys digitata 33.33 % 0.001128 0.043993
Cluster_233 Azolla filiculoides 50.0 % 0.000651 0.008135
Cluster_198 Azolla filiculoides 16.67 % 0.001951 0.046829
Cluster_27 Azolla filiculoides 1.78 % 2e-05 0.000804
Cluster_109 Alsophila latebrosa 2.44 % 0.000333 0.007261
Cluster_96 Amblovenatum opulentum 1.3 % 0.002922 0.027108
Cluster_123 Amblovenatum opulentum 1.1 % 0.004049 0.023776
Cluster_569 Amblovenatum opulentum 33.33 % 0.001552 0.005277
Cluster_214 Amblovenatum opulentum 1.34 % 0.00274 0.037233
Cluster_143 Ceratopteris richardii 1.28 % 0.018888 0.03749
Cluster_68 Lindsaea ensifolia 2.0 % 0.00995 0.027603
Cluster_68 Nephrolepis biserrata 1.2 % 0.016421 0.047212
Cluster_125 Nephrolepis biserrata 2.17 % 0.009131 0.049568
Cluster_174 Oryza sativa 1.65 % 0.000954 0.004884
Cluster_96 Physcomitrella patens 2.13 % 0.001448 0.014066
Cluster_446 Pyrrosia piloselloides 50.0 % 0.0009 0.003798
Cluster_60 Stenochlaena palustris 2.38 % 0.010186 0.039612
Sequences (7779) (download table)

Info: GO-associations disabled for items with more than 300 associated sequences !
InterPro and Family associations disabled for items with more than 5000 associated sequences !