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Featured researches published by Ian Sillitoe.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

The InterPro protein families database: the classification resource after 15 years

Alex L. Mitchell; Hsin-Yu Chang; Louise Daugherty; Matthew Fraser; Sarah Hunter; Rodrigo Lopez; Craig McAnulla; Conor McMenamin; Gift Nuka; Sebastien Pesseat; Amaia Sangrador-Vegas; Maxim Scheremetjew; Claudia Rato; Siew-Yit Yong; Alex Bateman; Marco Punta; Teresa K. Attwood; Christian J. A. Sigrist; Nicole Redaschi; Catherine Rivoire; Ioannis Xenarios; Daniel Kahn; Dominique Guyot; Peer Bork; Ivica Letunic; Julian Gough; Matt E. Oates; Daniel H. Haft; Hongzhan Huang; Darren A. Natale

The InterPro database (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/interpro/) is a freely available resource that can be used to classify sequences into protein families and to predict the presence of important domains and sites. Central to the InterPro database are predictive models, known as signatures, from a range of different protein family databases that have different biological focuses and use different methodological approaches to classify protein families and domains. InterPro integrates these signatures, capitalizing on the respective strengths of the individual databases, to produce a powerful protein classification resource. Here, we report on the status of InterPro as it enters its 15th year of operation, and give an overview of new developments with the database and its associated Web interfaces and software. In particular, the new domain architecture search tool is described and the process of mapping of Gene Ontology terms to InterPro is outlined. We also discuss the challenges faced by the resource given the explosive growth in sequence data in recent years. InterPro (version 48.0) contains 36 766 member database signatures integrated into 26 238 InterPro entries, an increase of over 3993 entries (5081 signatures), since 2012.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2017

InterPro in 2017—beyond protein family and domain annotations

Robert D. Finn; Teresa K. Attwood; Patricia C. Babbitt; Alex Bateman; Peer Bork; Alan Bridge; Hsin Yu Chang; Zsuzsanna Dosztányi; Sara El-Gebali; Matthew Fraser; Julian Gough; David R Haft; Gemma L. Holliday; Hongzhan Huang; Xiaosong Huang; Ivica Letunic; Rodrigo Lopez; Shennan Lu; Huaiyu Mi; Jaina Mistry; Darren A. Natale; Marco Necci; Gift Nuka; Christine A. Orengo; Youngmi Park; Sebastien Pesseat; Damiano Piovesan; Simon Potter; Neil D. Rawlings; Nicole Redaschi

InterPro (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/interpro/) is a freely available database used to classify protein sequences into families and to predict the presence of important domains and sites. InterProScan is the underlying software that allows both protein and nucleic acid sequences to be searched against InterPros predictive models, which are provided by its member databases. Here, we report recent developments with InterPro and its associated software, including the addition of two new databases (SFLD and CDD), and the functionality to include residue-level annotation and prediction of intrinsic disorder. These developments enrich the annotations provided by InterPro, increase the overall number of residues annotated and allow more specific functional inferences.


Bioinformatics | 2016

MSAViewer: interactive JavaScript visualization of multiple sequence alignments

Guy Yachdav; Sebastian Wilzbach; Benedikt Rauscher; Robert L. Sheridan; Ian Sillitoe; James B. Procter; Suzanna E. Lewis; Burkhard Rost; Tatyana Goldberg

Summary: The MSAViewer is a quick and easy visualization and analysis JavaScript component for Multiple Sequence Alignment data of any size. Core features include interactive navigation through the alignment, application of popular color schemes, sorting, selecting and filtering. The MSAViewer is ‘web ready’: written entirely in JavaScript, compatible with modern web browsers and does not require any specialized software. The MSAViewer is part of the BioJS collection of components. Availability and Implementation: The MSAViewer is released as open source software under the Boost Software License 1.0. Documentation, source code and the viewer are available at http://msa.biojs.net/. Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online. Contact: [email protected]


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

The CATH domain structure database: new protocols and classification levels give a more comprehensive resource for exploring evolution

Lesley H. Greene; Tony E. Lewis; Sarah Addou; Alison L. Cuff; Timothy Dallman; Mark Dibley; Oliver Redfern; Frances M. G. Pearl; Rekha Nambudiry; Adam J. Reid; Ian Sillitoe; Corin Yeats; Janet M. Thornton; Christine A. Orengo

We report the latest release (version 3.0) of the CATH protein domain database (). There has been a 20% increase in the number of structural domains classified in CATH, up to 86 151 domains. Release 3.0 comprises 1110 fold groups and 2147 homologous superfamilies. To cope with the increases in diverse structural homologues being determined by the structural genomics initiatives, more sensitive methods have been developed for identifying boundaries in multi-domain proteins and for recognising homologues. The CATH classification update is now being driven by an integrated pipeline that links these automated procedures with validation steps, that have been made easier by the provision of information rich web pages summarising comparison scores and relevant links to external sites for each domain being classified. An analysis of the population of domains in the CATH hierarchy and several domain characteristics are presented for version 3.0. We also report an update of the CATH Dictionary of homologous structures (CATH-DHS) which now contains multiple structural alignments, consensus information and functional annotations for 1459 well populated superfamilies in CATH. CATH is directly linked to the Gene3D database which is a projection of CATH structural data onto ∼2 million sequences in completed genomes and UniProt.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

CATH: comprehensive structural and functional annotations for genome sequences

Ian Sillitoe; Tony E. Lewis; Alison L. Cuff; Sayoni Das; Paul Ashford; Natalie L. Dawson; Nicholas Furnham; Roman A. Laskowski; David A. Lee; Jonathan G. Lees; Sonja Lehtinen; Romain A. Studer; Janet M. Thornton; Christine A. Orengo

The latest version of the CATH-Gene3D protein structure classification database (4.0, http://www.cathdb.info) provides annotations for over 235 000 protein domain structures and includes 25 million domain predictions. This article provides an update on the major developments in the 2 years since the last publication in this journal including: significant improvements to the predictive power of our functional families (FunFams); the release of our ‘current’ putative domain assignments (CATH-B); a new, strictly non-redundant data set of CATH domains suitable for homology benchmarking experiments (CATH-40) and a number of improvements to the web pages.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2004

The CATH Domain Structure Database and related resources Gene3D and DHS provide comprehensive domain family information for genome analysis

Frances M. G. Pearl; Annabel E. Todd; Ian Sillitoe; Mark Dibley; Oliver Redfern; Tony E. Lewis; Christopher G. Bennett; Russell L. Marsden; Alastair Grant; David A. Lee; Adrian Akpor; Michael Maibaum; Andrew P. Harrison; Timothy Dallman; Gabrielle A. Reeves; Ilhem Diboun; Sarah Addou; Stefano Lise; Caroline E. Johnston; Antonio Sillero; Janet M. Thornton; Christine A. Orengo

The CATH database of protein domain structures (http://www.biochem.ucl.ac.uk/bsm/cath/) currently contains 43 229 domains classified into 1467 superfamilies and 5107 sequence families. Each structural family is expanded with sequence relatives from GenBank and completed genomes, using a variety of efficient sequence search protocols and reliable thresholds. This extended CATH protein family database contains 616 470 domain sequences classified into 23 876 sequence families. This results in the significant expansion of the CATH HMM model library to include models built from the CATH sequence relatives, giving a 10% increase in coverage for detecting remote homologues. An improved Dictionary of Homologous superfamilies (DHS) (http://www.biochem.ucl.ac.uk/bsm/dhs/) containing specific sequence, structural and functional information for each superfamily in CATH considerably assists manual validation of homologues. Information on sequence relatives in CATH superfamilies, GenBank and completed genomes is presented in the CATH associated DHS and Gene3D resources. Domain partnership information can be obtained from Gene3D (http://www.biochem.ucl.ac.uk/bsm/cath/Gene3D/). A new CATH server has been implemented (http://www.biochem.ucl.ac.uk/cgi-bin/cath/CathServer.pl) providing automatic classification of newly determined sequences and structures using a suite of rapid sequence and structure comparison methods. The statistical significance of matches is assessed and links are provided to the putative superfamily or fold group to which the query sequence or structure is assigned.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2003

The CATH database: an extended protein family resource for structural and functional genomics

Frances M. G. Pearl; C. F. Bennett; James E. Bray; Andrew P. Harrison; Nigel J. Martin; Adrian J. Shepherd; Ian Sillitoe; Janet M. Thornton; Christine A. Orengo

The CATH database of protein domain structures (http://www.biochem.ucl.ac.uk/bsm/cath_new) currently contains 34 287 domain structures classified into 1383 superfamilies and 3285 sequence families. Each structural family is expanded with domain sequence relatives recruited from GenBank using a variety of efficient sequence search protocols and reliable thresholds. This extended resource, known as the CATH-protein family database (CATH-PFDB) contains a total of 310 000 domain sequences classified into 26 812 sequence families. New sequence search protocols have been designed, based on these intermediate sequence libraries, to allow more regular updating of the classification. Further developments include the adaptation of a recently developed method for rapid structure comparison, based on secondary structure matching, for domain boundary assignment. The philosophy behind CATHEDRAL is the recognition of recurrent folds already classified in CATH. Benchmarking of CATHEDRAL, using manually validated domain assignments, demonstrated that 43% of domains boundaries could be completely automatically assigned. This is an improvement on a previous consensus approach for which only 10-20% of domains could be reliably processed in a completely automated fashion. Since domain boundary assignment is a significant bottleneck in the classification of new structures, CATHEDRAL will also help to increase the frequency of CATH updates.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2000

Assigning genomic sequences to CATH.

Frances M. G. Pearl; David A. Lee; James E. Bray; Ian Sillitoe; Annabel E. Todd; Andrew P. Harrison; Janet M. Thornton; Christine A. Orengo

We report the latest release (version 1.6) of the CATH protein domains database (http://www.biochem.ucl. ac.uk/bsm/cath ). This is a hierarchical classification of 18 577 domains into evolutionary families and structural groupings. We have identified 1028 homo-logous superfamilies in which the proteins have both structural, and sequence or functional similarity. These can be further clustered into 672 fold groups and 35 distinct architectures. Recent developments of the database include the generation of 3D templates for recognising structural relatives in each fold group, which has led to significant improvements in the speed and accuracy of updating the database and also means that less manual validation is required. We also report the establishment of the CATH-PFDB (Protein Family Database), which associates 1D sequences with the 3D homologous superfamilies. Sequences showing identifiable homology to entries in CATH have been extracted from GenBank using PSI-BLAST. A CATH-PSIBLAST server has been established, which allows you to scan a new sequence against the database. The CATH Dictionary of Homologous Superfamilies (DHS), which contains validated multiple structural alignments annotated with consensus functional information for evolutionary protein superfamilies, has been updated to include annotations associated with sequence relatives identified in GenBank. The DHS is a powerful tool for considering the variation of functional properties within a given CATH superfamily and in deciding what functional properties may be reliably inherited by a newly identified relative.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2009

The CATH classification revisited—architectures reviewed and new ways to characterize structural divergence in superfamilies

Alison L. Cuff; Ian Sillitoe; Tony E. Lewis; Oliver Redfern; Richard C. Garratt; Janet M. Thornton; Christine A. Orengo

The latest version of CATH (class, architecture, topology, homology) (version 3.2), released in July 2008 (http://www.cathdb.info), contains 1 14 215 domains, 2178 Homologous superfamilies and 1110 fold groups. We have assigned 20 330 new domains, 87 new homologous superfamilies and 26 new folds since CATH release version 3.1. A total of 28 064 new domains have been assigned since our NAR 2007 database publication (CATH version 3.0). The CATH website has been completely redesigned and includes more comprehensive documentation. We have revisited the CATH architecture level as part of the development of a ‘Protein Chart’ and present information on the population of each architecture. The CATHEDRAL structure comparison algorithm has been improved and used to characterize structural diversity in CATH superfamilies and structural overlaps between superfamilies. Although the majority of superfamilies in CATH are not structurally diverse and do not overlap significantly with other superfamilies, ∼4% of superfamilies are very diverse and these are the superfamilies that are most highly populated in both the PDB and in the genomes. Information on the degree of structural diversity in each superfamily and structural overlaps between superfamilies can now be downloaded from the CATH website.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

New functional families (FunFams) in CATH to improve the mapping of conserved functional sites to 3D structures

Ian Sillitoe; Alison L. Cuff; Benoit H. Dessailly; Natalie L. Dawson; Nicholas Furnham; David A. Lee; Jonathan G. Lees; Tony E. Lewis; Romain A. Studer; Robert Rentzsch; Corin Yeats; Janet M. Thornton; Christine A. Orengo

CATH version 3.5 (Class, Architecture, Topology, Homology, available at http://www.cathdb.info/) contains 173 536 domains, 2626 homologous superfamilies and 1313 fold groups. When focusing on structural genomics (SG) structures, we observe that the number of new folds for CATH v3.5 is slightly less than for previous releases, and this observation suggests that we may now know the majority of folds that are easily accessible to structure determination. We have improved the accuracy of our functional family (FunFams) sub-classification method and the CATH sequence domain search facility has been extended to provide FunFam annotations for each domain. The CATH website has been redesigned. We have improved the display of functional data and of conserved sequence features associated with FunFams within each CATH superfamily.

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David A. Lee

Queen Mary University of London

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Tony E. Lewis

University College London

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Alison L. Cuff

University College London

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Sayoni Das

University College London

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