PROCOGNATE is a database of protein cognate ligands for the domains in enzyme structures as described by CATH, SCOP and Pfam, and is available as an interactive website or a flat file. This article gives an overview of the database and its generation and presents a new website front end, as well as recent increased coverage in our dataset via inclusion of Pfam domains. We also describe navigation of the website and its features. The current version (1.3) of PROCOGNATE covers 4123, 4536, 5876 structures and 377, 326, 695 superfamilies/families in CATH, SCOP and Pfam, respectively. PROCOGNATE can be accessed at: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/thornton-srv/databases/procognate
International audienceIn the last two years the Pfam database (http://pfam.xfam.org) has undergone a...
The proteins in a cell often assemble into complexes to carry out their functions and play an essent...
Pfam is a database of protein families that currently contains 7973 entries (release 18.0). A recent...
In this paper we provide an overview of our current knowledge of the mapping between small molecule ...
The ProDom database contains protein domain families generated from the SWISS-PROT database by autom...
ProDom is a comprehensive database of protein domain families generated from the global com-parison ...
Pfam is a large collection of protein multiple sequence alignments and profile hidden Markov models....
Pfam is a large collection of protein families and domains. Over the past 2 years the number of fami...
Among the various databases dedicated to the identification of protein families and domains, PROSITE...
Motivation: The PFDB (Protein Family Database) is a new database designed to integrate protein famil...
The PROSITE database consists of a large collection of biologically meaningful signatures that are d...
Pfam is a comprehensive collection of protein domains and families, represented as multiple sequence...
Pfam is a database of protein families that currently contains 7973 entries (release 18.0). A recent...
PROSITE consists of documentation entries describing protein domains, families and functional sites,...
The database of protein complexes (PROTCOM) is a compilation of known 3D structures of protein–prote...
International audienceIn the last two years the Pfam database (http://pfam.xfam.org) has undergone a...
The proteins in a cell often assemble into complexes to carry out their functions and play an essent...
Pfam is a database of protein families that currently contains 7973 entries (release 18.0). A recent...
In this paper we provide an overview of our current knowledge of the mapping between small molecule ...
The ProDom database contains protein domain families generated from the SWISS-PROT database by autom...
ProDom is a comprehensive database of protein domain families generated from the global com-parison ...
Pfam is a large collection of protein multiple sequence alignments and profile hidden Markov models....
Pfam is a large collection of protein families and domains. Over the past 2 years the number of fami...
Among the various databases dedicated to the identification of protein families and domains, PROSITE...
Motivation: The PFDB (Protein Family Database) is a new database designed to integrate protein famil...
The PROSITE database consists of a large collection of biologically meaningful signatures that are d...
Pfam is a comprehensive collection of protein domains and families, represented as multiple sequence...
Pfam is a database of protein families that currently contains 7973 entries (release 18.0). A recent...
PROSITE consists of documentation entries describing protein domains, families and functional sites,...
The database of protein complexes (PROTCOM) is a compilation of known 3D structures of protein–prote...
International audienceIn the last two years the Pfam database (http://pfam.xfam.org) has undergone a...
The proteins in a cell often assemble into complexes to carry out their functions and play an essent...
Pfam is a database of protein families that currently contains 7973 entries (release 18.0). A recent...