\name{mouse4302ENZYME} \alias{mouse4302ENZYME} \title{Map between Manufacturer IDs and Enzyme Commission (EC) Numbers} \description{ mouse4302ENZYME is an R object that provides mappings between manufacturer identifiers and EC numbers. } \details{ Each manufacturer identifier maps to a named vector containing the EC number that corresponds to the enzyme produced by that gene. The name corresponds to the manufacturer identifier. If this information is unknown, the vector will contain an \code{NA}. Enzyme Commission numbers are assigned by the Nomenclature Committee of the International Union of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology \url{http://www.chem.qmw.ac.uk/iubmb/enzyme/} to allow enzymes to be identified. An Enzyme Commission number is of the format EC x.y.z.w, where x, y, z, and w are numeric numbers. In mouse4302ENZYME2PROBE, EC is dropped from the Enzyme Commission numbers. Enzyme Commission numbers have corresponding names that describe the functions of enzymes in such a way that EC x is a more general description than EC x.y that in turn is a more general description than EC x.y.z. The top level EC numbers and names are listed below: EC 1 oxidoreductases EC 2 transferases EC 3 hydrolases EC 4 lyases EC 5 isomerases EC 6 ligases The EC name for a given EC number can be viewed at \url{http://www.chem.qmul.ac.uk/iupac/jcbn/index.html#6} Mappings between probe identifiers and enzyme identifiers were obtained using files provided by: KEGG GENOME ftp://ftp.genome.jp/pub/kegg/genomes With a date stamp from the source of: 2011-Mar15 } \references{ \url{ftp://ftp.genome.ad.jp/pub/kegg/pathways} } \examples{ x <- mouse4302ENZYME # Get the probe identifiers that are mapped to an EC number mapped_probes <- mappedkeys(x) # Convert to a list xx <- as.list(x[mapped_probes]) if(length(xx) > 0) { # Get the ENZYME for the first five probes xx[1:5] # Get the first one xx[[1]] } } \keyword{datasets}