Human Gene Set: GOBP_RESPONSE_TO_GAMMA_RADIATION

For the Mouse gene set with the same name, see GOBP_RESPONSE_TO_GAMMA_RADIATION

Standard name GOBP_RESPONSE_TO_GAMMA_RADIATION
Systematic name M14914
Brief description Any process that results in a change in state or activity of a cell or an organism (in terms of movement, secretion, enzyme production, gene expression, etc.) as a result of a gamma radiation stimulus. Gamma radiation is a form of electromagnetic radiation (EMR) or light emission of a specific frequency produced from sub-atomic particle interaction, such as electron-positron annihilation and radioactive decay. Gamma rays are generally characterized as EMR having the highest frequency and energy, and also the shortest wavelength, within the electromagnetic radiation spectrum. [GOC:tair_curators]
Full description or abstract  
Collection C5: Ontology
      GO: Gene Ontology
            GO:BP: GO Biological Process
Source publication  
Exact source GO:0010332
Related gene sets  
External links http://amigo.geneontology.org/amigo/term/GO:0010332
Filtered by similarity ?
Source species Homo sapiens
Contributed by Gene Ontology (Gene Ontology Consortium)
Source platform or
identifier namespace
Human_NCBI_Gene_ID
Dataset references  
Download gene set format: grp | gmt | xml | json | TSV metadata
Compute overlaps ? (show collections to investigate for overlap with this gene set)
Compendia expression profiles ? NG-CHM interactive heatmaps
(Please note that clustering takes a few seconds)
GTEx compendium
Human tissue compendium (Novartis)
Global Cancer Map (Broad Institute)
NCI-60 cell lines (National Cancer Institute)

Legacy heatmaps (PNG)
GTEx compendium
Human tissue compendium (Novartis)
Global Cancer Map (Broad Institute)
NCI-60 cell lines (National Cancer Institute)
Advanced query Further investigate these 52 genes
Gene families ? Categorize these 52 genes by gene family
Show members (show 52 source identifiers mapped to 52 genes)
Version history 2024.1.Hs: Updated to GO Release 2024-04-24.

See MSigDB license terms here. Please note that certain gene sets have special access terms.