Results summary | View all lists in GO:BiolProc | View all genes in R03AC.profile.d50 |
List Name | Description | Total probes |
Expected matches |
Actual matches |
Fold Enrichment |
Binomial p-value |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
skeletal muscle development | The process whose specific outcome is the progression of the skeletal muscle over time, from its formation to the mature structure. | 85 | 0.21 | 3 | 14.28 | 1.28e-03 |
cell development | The process whose specific outcome is the progression of the cell over time, from its formation to the mature structure. Cell development does not include the steps involved in committing a cell to a specific fate. | 1692 | 4.18 | 12 | 2.87 | 1.31e-03 |
anterior/posterior pattern formation | The regionalization process by which specific areas of cell differentiation are determined along the anterior-posterior axis. | 99 | 0.24 | 3 | 12.26 | 1.98e-03 |
striated muscle development | The developmental sequence of events leading to the formation of adult muscle that occurs in the animal and in cultured cells. In vertebrate skeletal muscle the main events are: the fusion of myoblasts to form myotubes that increase in size by further fusion to them of myoblasts, the formation of myofibrils within their cytoplasm and the establishment of functional neuromuscular junctions with motor neurons. At this stage they can be regarded as mature muscle fibers. | 137 | 0.34 | 3 | 8.86 | 4.95e-03 |
regionalization | The pattern specification process by which an axis or axes is subdivided in space to define an area or volume in which specific patterns of cell differentiation will take place or in which cells interpret a specific environment. | 153 | 0.38 | 3 | 7.93 | 6.71e-03 |
forebrain development | The process whose specific outcome is the progression of the forebrain over time, from its formation to the mature structure. The forebrain is the anterior of the three primary divisions of the developing chordate brain or the corresponding part of the adult brain (in vertebrates, includes especially the cerebral hemispheres, the thalamus, and the hypothalamus and especially in higher vertebrates is the main control center for sensory and associative information processing, visceral functions, and voluntary motor functions). | 56 | 0.14 | 2 | 14.45 | 8.61e-03 |