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mmsearch: a motif arrangement language and search program
Junier T, Pagni M, Bucher P.
Bioinformatics. 2001 Dec;17(12):1234-5
PMID: 11751236
This paper presents a language for describing arrangements of motifs in biological sequences, and a program that uses the language to find the arrangements in motif match databases. The program does not by itself search for the constituent motifs, and is thus independent of how they are detected, which allows it to use motif match data of various origins. AVAILABILITY: The program can be tested online at http://hits.isb-sib.ch and the distribution is available from ftp://ftp.isrec.isb-sib.ch/pub/software/unix/mmsearch-1.0.tar.gz CONTACT: Thomas.Junier@isrec.unil.ch SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The full documentation about mmsearchis available from http://hits.isb-sib.ch/~tjunier/mmsearch/doc.
Proteome Analysis Database: online application of InterPro and CluSTr for the functional classification of proteins in whole gen
Apweiler R, Biswas M, Fleischmann W, Kanapin A, Karavidopoulou Y, Kersey P, Kriventseva EV, Mittard V, Mulder N, Phan I, Zdobnov E.
Nucleic Acids Res. 2001 Jan 1;29(1):44-8.
PMID: 11125045
The SWISS-PROT group at EBI has developed the Proteome Analysis Database utilising existing resources and providing comparative analysis of the predicted protein coding sequences of the complete genomes of bacteria, archaea and eukaryotes (http://www.ebi.ac. uk/proteome/). The two main projects used, InterPro and CluSTr, give a new perspective on families, domains and sites and cover 31-67% (InterPro statistics) of the proteins from each of the complete genomes. CluSTr covers the three complete eukaryotic genomes and the incomplete human genome data. The Proteome Analysis Database is accompanied by a program that has been designed to carry out InterPro proteome comparisons for any one proteome against any other one or more of the proteomes in the database.
trEST, trGEN and Hits: access to databases of predicted protein sequences
Pagni M,Iseli C,Junier T,Falquet L,Jongeneel V,Bucher P
Nucleic Acids Res. 2001 Jan 1;29(1):148-51
PMID: 11125074
High throughput genome (HTG) and expressed sequence tag (EST) sequences are currently the most abundant nucleotide sequence classes in the public database. The large volume, high degree of fragmentation and lack of gene structure annotations prevent efficient and effective searches of HTG and EST data for protein sequence homologies by standard search methods. Here, we briefly describe three newly developed resources that should make discovery of interesting genes in these sequence classes easier in the future, especially to biologists not having access to a powerful local bioinformatics environment. trEST and trGEN are regularly regenerated databases of hypothetical protein sequences predicted from EST and HTG sequences, respectively. Hits is a web-based data retrieval and analysis system providing access to precomputed matches between protein sequences (including sequences from trEST and trGEN) and patterns and profiles from Prosite and Pfam. The three resources can be accessed via the Hits home page (http://hits. isb-sib.ch).