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One way to visualize the similarity between two protein or nucleic acid sequences is to use a similarity matrix, known as a dot plot. These were introduced by Gibbs and McIntyre in 1970 [1] and are two-dimensional matrices that have the sequences of the proteins being compared along the vertical and horizontal axes.
The dot-matrix approach, which implicitly produces a family of alignments for individual sequence regions, is qualitative and conceptually simple, though time-consuming to analyze on a large scale. In the absence of noise, it can be easy to visually identify certain sequence features—such as insertions, deletions, repeats, or inverted repeats ...
A computer-assisted design (CAD) tool for synthetic biology, used to design genetic constructs based on grammar rules. Linux, macOS, Windows: Apache License 2.0 GenoCAD Team (Virginia Bioinformatics Institute) Genomespace: Centralized web application that provides data format transformations and facilitates connections with other bioinformatics ...
A web platform to search, visualize and share data for low complexity regions in protein sequences. LCR-eXXXplorer offers tools for displaying LCRs from the UniProt/SwissProt knowledgebase, in combination with other relevant protein features, predicted or experimentally verified.
This list of protein subcellular localisation prediction tools includes software, databases, and web services that are used for protein subcellular localization prediction. Some tools are included that are commonly used to infer location through predicted structural properties, such as signal peptide or transmembrane helices , and these tools ...
Ultra-fast sequence analysis tool: Both: Edgar, R. C. (2010). "Search and clustering orders of magnitude faster than BLAST". Bioinformatics. 26 (19): 2460– 2461. doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btq461. PMID 20709691. publication: 2010 OSWALD OpenCL Smith-Waterman on Altera's FPGA for Large Protein Databases Protein
UTOPIA (User-friendly Tools for Operating Informatics Applications) is a suite of free tools for visualising and analysing bioinformatics data. Based on an ontology-driven data model, it contains applications for viewing and aligning protein sequences, rendering complex molecular structures in 3D, and for finding and using resources such as web services and data objects.
Software tools used for visualizing biological data range from simple, standalone programs to complex, integrated systems. An emerging trend is the blurring of boundaries between the visualization of 3D structures at atomic resolution, the visualization of larger complexes by cryo-electron microscopy , and the visualization of the location of ...