Peptide toxins synthesized by venomous animals have been extensively studied in the last decades. To be useful to the scientific community, this knowledge has been stored, annotated and made easy to retrieve by several databases. The aim of this article is to present what type of information users can access from each database. ArachnoServer and ConoServer focus on spider toxins and cone snail toxins, respectively. UniProtKB, a generalist protein knowledgebase, has an animal toxin-dedicated annotation program that includes toxins from all venomous animals. Finally, the ATDB metadatabase compiles data and annotations from other databases and provides toxin ontology
The Tox-Prot program was initiated in order to provide the scientific community a summary of the cur...
The present review article describes invertebrate venoms and various toxins secreted by them. Animal...
Purpose: Toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems are diverse and abundant genetic modules in prokaryotic cells ...
Peptide toxins synthesized by venomous animals have been extensively studied in the last decades. To...
Background Venomous animals incapacitate their prey using complex venoms that can contain hundreds o...
ArachnoServer (www.arachnoserver.org) is a manually curated database providing information on the se...
Animal toxins are of interest to a wide range of scientists, due to their numerous applications in p...
Toxins are detected in sporadic species along the evolutionary tree of the animal kingdom. Venomous ...
Molecular toxinology research was initially driven by an interest in the small subset of animal toxi...
Objective: A wide range of toxic effects against other species are affected through potential protei...
Venoms from marine and terrestrial animals (cone snails, scorpions, spiders, snakes, centipedes, cni...
In the course of my duties as a curator for the ArachnoServer database [1,2], I recently came acros...
This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which perm...
Thousands of arthropod species, ranging from arachnids (spiders and scorpions) to hymenopterans (ant...
Traditional pipelines feeding drugs coming to the market are declining. This is one of the reasons w...
The Tox-Prot program was initiated in order to provide the scientific community a summary of the cur...
The present review article describes invertebrate venoms and various toxins secreted by them. Animal...
Purpose: Toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems are diverse and abundant genetic modules in prokaryotic cells ...
Peptide toxins synthesized by venomous animals have been extensively studied in the last decades. To...
Background Venomous animals incapacitate their prey using complex venoms that can contain hundreds o...
ArachnoServer (www.arachnoserver.org) is a manually curated database providing information on the se...
Animal toxins are of interest to a wide range of scientists, due to their numerous applications in p...
Toxins are detected in sporadic species along the evolutionary tree of the animal kingdom. Venomous ...
Molecular toxinology research was initially driven by an interest in the small subset of animal toxi...
Objective: A wide range of toxic effects against other species are affected through potential protei...
Venoms from marine and terrestrial animals (cone snails, scorpions, spiders, snakes, centipedes, cni...
In the course of my duties as a curator for the ArachnoServer database [1,2], I recently came acros...
This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which perm...
Thousands of arthropod species, ranging from arachnids (spiders and scorpions) to hymenopterans (ant...
Traditional pipelines feeding drugs coming to the market are declining. This is one of the reasons w...
The Tox-Prot program was initiated in order to provide the scientific community a summary of the cur...
The present review article describes invertebrate venoms and various toxins secreted by them. Animal...
Purpose: Toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems are diverse and abundant genetic modules in prokaryotic cells ...