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PIRSF: family classification system at the Protein Information Resource
Author(s) -
Cathy Wu,
A. N. NIKOL'SKAYA,
Hongzhan Huang,
Lai-Su Yeh,
Darren A. Natale,
C R Vinayaka,
Zhang-Zhi Hu,
Raja Mazumder,
Sandeep Kumar,
Panagiotis Kourtesis,
Robert S. Ledley,
Barış Ethem Süzek,
Leslie Arminski,
Chuming Chen,
Jian Zhang,
Jorge Louie Cardenas,
Sehee Chung,
Jorge Castro-Alvear,
Georgi Dinkov,
Wia C. Barker
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkh097
Subject(s) - annotation , uniprot , biology , structural classification of proteins database , phylogenetic tree , protein family , protein domain , protein superfamily , sequence alignment , subfamily , domain (mathematical analysis) , protein sequencing , computational biology , resource (disambiguation) , information retrieval , genetics , computer science , peptide sequence , protein structure , gene , mathematical analysis , biochemistry , mathematics , computer network
The Protein Information Resource (PIR) is an integrated public resource of protein informatics. To facilitate the sensible propagation and standardization of protein annotation and the systematic detection of annotation errors, PIR has extended its superfamily concept and developed the SuperFamily (PIRSF) classification system. Based on the evolutionary relationships of whole proteins, this classification system allows annotation of both specific biological and generic biochemical functions. The system adopts a network structure for protein classification from superfamily to subfamily levels. Protein family members are homologous (sharing common ancestry) and homeomorphic (sharing full-length sequence similarity with common domain architecture). The PIRSF database consists of two data sets, preliminary clusters and curated families. The curated families include family name, protein membership, parent-child relationship, domain architecture, and optional description and bibliography. PIRSF is accessible from the website at http://pir.georgetown.edu/pirsf/ for report retrieval and sequence classification. The report presents family annotation, membership statistics, cross-references to other databases, graphical display of domain architecture, and links to multiple sequence alignments and phylogenetic trees for curated families. PIRSF can be utilized to analyze phylogenetic profiles, to reveal functional convergence and divergence, and to identify interesting relationships between homeomorphic families, domains and structural classes.

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