edoc-vmtest

The protein model portal

Arnold, K. and Kiefer, F. and Kopp, J. and Battey, J. N. and Podvinec, M. and Westbrook, J. D. and Berman, H. M. and Bordoli, L. and Schwede, T.. (2009) The protein model portal. Journal of structural and functional genomics, 10 (1). pp. 1-8.

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Official URL: http://edoc.unibas.ch/dok/A5259301

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Abstract

Structural Genomics has been successful in determining the structures of many unique proteins in a high throughput manner. Still, the number of known protein sequences is much larger than the number of experimentally solved protein structures. Homology (or comparative) modeling methods make use of experimental protein structures to build models for evolutionary related proteins. Thereby, experimental structure determination efforts and homology modeling complement each other in the exploration of the protein structure space. One of the challenges in using model information effectively has been to access all models available for a specific protein in heterogeneous formats at different sites using various incompatible accession code systems. Often, structure models for hundreds of proteins can be derived from a given experimentally determined structure, using a variety of established methods. This has been done by all of the PSI centers, and by various independent modeling groups. The goal of the Protein Model Portal (PMP) is to provide a single portal which gives access to the various models that can be leveraged from PSI targets and other experimental protein structures. A single interface allows all existing pre-computed models across these various sites to be queried simultaneously, and provides links to interactive services for template selection, target-template alignment, model building, and quality assessment. The current release of the portal consists of 7.6 million model structures provided by different partner resources (CSMP, JCSG, MCSG, NESG, NYSGXRC, JCMM, ModBase, SWISS-MODEL Repository). The PMP is available at http://www.proteinmodelportal.org and from the PSI Structural Genomics Knowledgebase.
Faculties and Departments:05 Faculty of Science > Departement Biozentrum > Computational & Systems Biology > Bioinformatics (Schwede)
UniBasel Contributors:Schwede, Torsten
Item Type:Article, refereed
Article Subtype:Research Article
Publisher:Springer
ISSN:1345-711x
Note:Publication type according to Uni Basel Research Database: Journal article
Language:English
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Last Modified:24 Jul 2017 14:15
Deposited On:22 Mar 2012 13:34

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