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Any process involved in the maintenance of an internal steady-state of cations within an organism or cell. Any process involved in the maintenance of an internal steady-state of transition metal ions within an organism or cell. A transition metal is an element whose atom has an incomplete d-subshell of extranuclear electrons, or which gives rise to a cation or cations with an incomplete d-subshell. Transition metals often have more than one valency state. Biologically relevant transition metals include vanadium, manganese, iron, copper, cobalt, nickel, molybdenum and silver. Any process involved in the maintenance of an internal steady-state of transition metal ions at the level of a cell. A transition metal is an element whose atom has an incomplete d-subshell of extranuclear electrons, or which gives rise to a cation or cations with an incomplete d-subshell. Transition metals often have more than one valency state. Biologically relevant transition metals include vanadium, manganese, iron, copper, cobalt, nickel, molybdenum and silver. Any process involved in the maintenance of an internal steady-state of metal ions within an organism or cell.

View Gene Ontology (GO) Term

GO TERM SUMMARY

Name: transition metal ion homeostasis
Acc: GO:0055076
Aspect: Biological Process
Desc: Any process involved in the maintenance of an internal steady-state of transition metal ions within an organism or cell. A transition metal is an element whose atom has an incomplete d-subshell of extranuclear electrons, or which gives rise to a cation or cations with an incomplete d-subshell. Transition metals often have more than one valency state. Biologically relevant transition metals include vanadium, manganese, iron, copper, cobalt, nickel, molybdenum and silver.
Proteins in PDR annotated with:
   This term: 1 [Search]
   Term or descendants: 9 [Search]


[geneontology.org]
INTERACTIVE GO GRAPH

GO:0055076 - transition metal ion homeostasis (interactive image map)

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Created and Maintained by: Michael Riffle