Process View
A process in which force is generated within involuntary skeletal muscle tissue, resulting in a change in muscle geometry. This process occurs in the diaphragm. Force generation involves a chemo-mechanical energy conversion step that is carried out by the actin/myosin complex activity, which generates force through ATP hydrolysis. The diaphragm is a striated muscle that is necessary for the process of respiratory gaseous exchange.

In addition to gene-name show these genes:
Click on a gene's description to view its network relationships with genes known to be involved in "diaphragm contraction"
| Name | Description | Probability | Func Analog Organism | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PSAP | prosaposin | 0.067 | ||
| NUCB1 | nucleobindin 1 | 0.051 | ||
| PLD3 | phospholipase D family, member 3 | 0.022 | ||
| CTSA | cathepsin A | 0.019 | ||
| SLC9A3R1 | solute carrier family 9 (sodium/hydrogen exchanger), member 3 regulator 1 | 0.014 | ||
| TNNI1 | troponin I type 1 (skeletal, slow) | 0.012 | ||
| TPP1 | tripeptidyl peptidase I | 0.011 |