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Either of the lipid bilayers that surround a plastid and form the plastid envelope. Any constituent part of a plastid, a member of a family of organelles found in the cytoplasm of plants and some protists, which are membrane-bounded and contain DNA. Plant plastids develop from a common type, the proplastid. The inner, i.e. lumen-facing, lipid bilayer of an organelle envelope; usually highly selective to most ions and metabolites. Loosely bound to one surface of an organelle membrane, but not integrated into the hydrophobic region. Loosely bound to one surface of a plastid membrane, but not integrated into the hydrophobic region. Loosely bound to one surface of a plastid inner membrane, but not integrated into the hydrophobic region. Loosely bound to the surface of a plastid inner membrane that faces the stroma, but not integrated into the hydrophobic region. The inner, i.e. lumen-facing, lipid bilayer of the plastid envelope; also faces the plastid stroma.

View Gene Ontology (GO) Term

GO TERM SUMMARY

Name: extrinsic to plastid inner membrane
Acc: GO:0035453
Aspect: Cellular Component
Desc: Loosely bound to one surface of a plastid inner membrane, but not integrated into the hydrophobic region.
Synonyms:
  • peripheral to plastid inner membrane
Proteins in PDR annotated with:
   This term: 0
   Term or descendants: 0


[geneontology.org]
INTERACTIVE GO GRAPH

GO:0035453 - extrinsic to plastid inner membrane (interactive image map)

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