1. Animal Toxins: How is Complexity Represented in Databases?
- Author
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Florence Jungo, Anne Estreicher, Amos Bairoch, Lydie Bougueleret, and Ioannis Xenarios
- Subjects
0303 health sciences ,venom protein ,ConoServer ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,ArachnoServer ,030302 biochemistry & molecular biology ,Proteins ,Spider Venoms ,animal toxin ,Review ,ATDB ,Toxicology ,Tox-Prot ,03 medical and health sciences ,Animals ,UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot ,ddc:576 ,Databases, Protein ,Peptides ,Software ,database ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
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.
- Published
- 2010
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