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The directed movement of carbohydrate into, out of, within or between cells by means of some external agent such as a transporter or pore. Carbohydrates are any of a group of organic compounds based of the general formula Cx(H2O)y. The directed movement of methylgalactoside into, out of, within or between cells by means of some external agent such as a transporter or pore. Methylgalactoside is a compound in which the H of the OH group on carbon-1 of galactose is replaced by a methyl group. The directed movement of rhamnose into, out of, within or between cells by means of some external agent such as a transporter or pore. Rhamnose occurs commonly as a compound of plant glycosides, in polysaccharides of gums and mucilages, and in bacterial polysaccharides. It is also a component of some plant cell wall polysaccharides and frequently acts as the sugar components of flavonoids. The directed movement of mannose into, out of, within or between cells by means of some external agent such as a transporter or pore. Mannose is the aldohexose manno-hexose, the C-2 epimer of glucose. The D-(+)-form is widely distributed in mannans and hemicelluloses and is of major importance in the core oligosaccharide of N-linked oligosaccharides of glycoproteins. The directed movement of N-acetylglucosamine into, out of, within or between cells by means of some external agent such as a transporter or pore. The directed movement of hexose across a membrane. Hexoses are any aldoses with a chain of six carbon atoms in the molecule. The directed movement of hexose into, out of, within or between cells by means of some external agent such as a transporter or pore. Hexoses are any aldoses with a chain of six carbon atoms in the molecule. The directed movement of N-acetylgalactosamine into, out of, within or between cells by means of some external agent such as a transporter or pore. N-acetylgalactosamine, 2-acetamido-2-deoxygalactopyranose, is the n-acetyl derivative of galactosamine. The directed movement of allose into, out of, within or between cells by means of some external agent such as a transporter or pore. Allose is an aldohexose similar to glucose, differing only in the configuration of the hydroxyl group of C-3. The directed movement of aldonate into, out of, within or between cells by means of some external agent such as a transporter or pore. The directed movement of fructose into, out of, within or between cells by means of some external agent such as a transporter or pore. Fructose exists in a open chain form or as a ring compound. D-fructose is the sweetest of the sugars and is found free in a large number of fruits and honey. The directed movement of fucose into, out of, within or between cells by means of some external agent such as a transporter or pore. Fucose is 6-deoxygalactose and has two enantiomers, D-fucose and L-fucose. The directed movement of galactose into, out of, within or between cells by means of some external agent such as a transporter or pore. D-galactose is widely distributed in combined form in plants, animals and microorganisms as a constituent of oligo- and polysaccharides; it also occurs in galactolipids and as its glucoside in lactose and melibiose. The directed movement of the hexose monosaccharide glucose into, out of, within or between cells by means of some external agent such as a transporter or pore. The directed movement of monosaccharides into, out of, within or between cells by means of some external agent such as a transporter or pore. Monosaccharides are the simplest carbohydrates; they are polyhydric alcohols containing either an aldehyde or a keto group and between three to ten or more carbon atoms. They form the constitutional repeating units of oligo- and polysaccharides. The directed movement of aldarate into, out of, within or between cells by means of some external agent such as a transporter or pore. The directed movement of hexose phosphate into, out of, within or between cells by means of some external agent such as a transporter or pore.

View Gene Ontology (GO) Term

GO TERM SUMMARY

Name: hexose transport
Acc: GO:0008645
Aspect: Biological Process
Desc: The directed movement of hexose into, out of, within or between cells by means of some external agent such as a transporter or pore. Hexoses are any aldoses with a chain of six carbon atoms in the molecule.
Proteins in PDR annotated with:
   This term: 26 [Search]
   Term or descendants: 244 [Search]


[geneontology.org]
INTERACTIVE GO GRAPH

GO:0008645 - hexose transport (interactive image map)

YRC Informatics Platform - Version 3.0
Created and Maintained by: Michael Riffle