| General Information | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Term | glutathione biosynthetic process | ID (Ontology) | GO:0006750 (Gene Ontology) |
| Definition | The chemical reactions and pathways resulting in the formation of glutathione, the tripeptide glutamylcysteinylglycine, which acts as a coenzyme for some enzymes and as an antioxidant in the protection of sulfhydryl groups in enzymes and other proteins.[ ISBN:0198506732 ] | ||
| Also Known As | "glutathione anabolism" ; "glutathione biosynthesis" ; "glutathione formation" (for all, see Synonyms field below) | ||
| Comment | |||
| Links to External Ontologies | |||
| QuickGO data AmiGO data | |||
| Annotations | |||
| Records annotated with this term OR any of its CHILD TERMS | |||
Full annotation statements including this term (annotations to child terms are NOT included), and relevant FlyBase records
|
|||
modified amino acid metabolic process |__glutathione metabolic process______________ |__modified amino acid biosynthetic process___| sulfur compound metabolic process | |__glutathione metabolic process______________| |__sulfur compound biosynthetic process_______| biosynthetic process | |__modified amino acid biosynthetic process___| |__amide biosynthetic process_________________| |__sulfur compound biosynthetic process_______| peptide biosynthetic process | |__nonribosomal peptide biosynthetic process__| amide metabolic process | |__glutathione metabolic process______________| |__amide biosynthetic process_________________| glutathione biosynthetic process 6 rec. |
| Spanning Tree View Settings | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Parents/Children View Depth |
|||
Relationships
|
|||
| Is a |
glutathione metabolic process nonribosomal peptide biosynthetic process modified amino acid biosynthetic process amide biosynthetic process sulfur compound biosynthetic process |
||
| Part of | |||
Synonyms & Secondary IDs
|
|||
| Synonyms | |||
|
|||
| Secondary IDs | |||
|
|
|||
External Crossreferences & Linkouts
|
|||
|
MetaCyc:GLUTATHIONESYN-PWY Reactome:R-HSA-174403 "Glutathione synthesis and recycling" |
|||