The appearance of a chemokine due to biosynthesis or secretion following a cellular stimulus, resulting in an increase in its intracellular or extracellular levels. All chemokines possess a number of conserved cysteine residues involved in intramolecular disulfide bond formation. Some chemokines are considered pro-inflammatory and can be induced during an immune response to recruit cells of the immune system to a site of infection, while others are considered homeostatic and are involved in controlling the migration of cells during normal processes of tissue maintenance or development. Chemokines are found in all vertebrates, some viruses and some bacteria. [ https://www.worldcat.org/search?q=bn%3A0198506732 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemokine GOC:rl GOC:BHF http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12183377 ]

Synonyms: chemokine anabolism chemokine synthesis chemokine formation chemokine biosynthesis

This is just here as a test because I lose it

Term information

Subsets

gocheck_do_not_annotate

creation date

2009-12-18T11:26:20Z

has alternative id

GO:0042033

GO:0090195

GO:0050755

has narrow synonym

chemokine biosynthetic process

chemokine secretion

chemokine metabolic process

has obo namespace

biological_process

id

GO:0032602