The PRINTS database: A fine-grained protein sequence annotation and analysis resource-its status in 2012

Teresa K. Attwood, Alain Coletta, Gareth Muirhead, Athanasia Pavlopoulou, Peter B. Philippou, Ivan Popov, Carlos Romá-Mateo, Athina Theodosiou, Alex L. Mitchell

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    The PRINTS database, now in its 21st year, houses a collection of diagnostic protein family 'fingerprints'. Fingerprints are groups of conserved motifs, evident in multiple sequence alignments, whose unique inter-relationships provide distinctive signatures for particular protein families and structural/functional domains. As such, they may be used to assign uncharacterized sequences to known families, and hence to infer tentative functional, structural and/or evolutionary relationships. The February 2012 release (version 42.0) includes 2156 fingerprints, encoding 12 444 individual motifs, covering a range of globular and membrane proteins, modular polypeptides and so on. Here, we report the current status of the database, and introduce a number of recent developments that help both to render a variety of our annotation and analysis tools easier to use and to make them more widely available. © The Author(s) 2012.
    Original languageEnglish
    Article numberbas019
    JournalDatabase
    Volume2012
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2012

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