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Some database queries for enzymes or other proteins result in several answers that have the same name or symbol but have different gene IDs (e.g., UGT1A9). When selecting one entry and adding it to the individual, the original gene ID cannot be seen any more. Different gene IDs usually refer to different fragments of one and the same protein.
Currently, one can only hope to back-track it from the expression profile, which takes significant time if many entries are present.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Some database queries for enzymes or other proteins result in several answers that have the same name or symbol but have different gene IDs (e.g., UGT1A9). When selecting one entry and adding it to the individual, the original gene ID cannot be seen any more. Different gene IDs usually refer to different fragments of one and the same protein.
Currently, one can only hope to back-track it from the expression profile, which takes significant time if many entries are present.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: