YRC Logo
PROTEIN SEARCH:
Descriptions Names[Advanced Search]

Either of the lipid bilayers that surround a plastid and form the plastid envelope. The lipid bilayer surrounding a microneme. Organized structure of distinctive morphology and function. Includes the nucleus, mitochondria, plastids, vacuoles, vesicles, ribosomes and the cytoskeleton, and prokaryotic structures such as anammoxosomes and pirellulosomes. Excludes the plasma membrane. The lipid bilayer surrounding any of the compartments of the ER-Golgi intermediate compartment system. Organized structure of distinctive morphology and function, bounded by a single or double lipid bilayer membrane. Includes the nucleus, mitochondria, plastids, vacuoles, and vesicles. Excludes the plasma membrane. The lipid bilayer surrounding an organelle. Loosely bound to one surface of an organelle membrane, but not integrated into the hydrophobic region. The inner, i.e. lumen-facing, lipid bilayer of an organelle envelope; usually highly selective to most ions and metabolites. The lipid bilayer surrounding the platelet dense tubular network. The lipid bilayer surrounding any membrane-bounded vesicle in the cell. The lipid bilayer surrounding the vacuole and separating its contents from the cytoplasm of the cell. The outer, i.e. cytoplasm-facing in a cellular organelle, lipid bilayer of an organelle envelope. Either of the lipid bilayers that surround the nucleus and form the nuclear envelope; excludes the intermembrane space. The portion of the plasma membrane surrounding the flagellum. Either of the lipid bilayers that surround the mitochondrion and form the mitochondrial envelope. The part of a cell or its extracellular environment in which a gene product is located. A gene product may be located in one or more parts of a cell and its location may be as specific as a particular macromolecular complex, that is, a stable, persistent association of macromolecules that function together. The lipid bilayer surrounding an attachment organelle. The lipid bilayer surrounding a rhoptry. The lipid bilayer surrounding a microbody. The lipid bilayer surrounding an acidocalcisome. Located in an organelle membrane such that some covalently attached portion of the gene product, for example part of a peptide sequence or some other covalently attached moiety such as a GPI anchor, spans or is embedded in one or both leaflets of the membrane. Double layer of lipid molecules that encloses all cells, and, in eukaryotes, many organelles; may be a single or double lipid bilayer; also includes associated proteins. The lipid bilayer surrounding any of the compartments of the Golgi apparatus. Any constituent part of a cell, the basic structural and functional unit of all organisms. The lipid bilayer surrounding the endoplasmic reticulum. A zone of apposition between the membranes of two organelles, structured by bridging complexes. Membrane contact sites (MCSs) are specialized for communication, including the efficient traffic of small molecules such as Ca2+ ions and lipids, as well as enzyme-substrate interactions. The lipid bilayer surrounding a hydrogenosome. Any constituent part of an organelle, an organized structure of distinctive morphology and function. Includes constituent parts of the nucleus, mitochondria, plastids, vacuoles, vesicles, ribosomes and the cytoskeleton, but excludes the plasma membrane. The lipid bilayer surrounding an endosome.

View Gene Ontology (GO) Term

GO TERM SUMMARY

Name: organelle membrane
Acc: GO:0031090
Aspect: Cellular Component
Desc: The lipid bilayer surrounding an organelle.
Proteins in PDR annotated with:
   This term: 6 [Search]
   Term or descendants: 5466 [Refine Search]


[geneontology.org]
INTERACTIVE GO GRAPH

GO:0031090 - organelle membrane (interactive image map)

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