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The ORF Finder (Open Reading Frame Finder) [16] is a graphical analysis tool which finds all open reading frames of a selectable minimum size in a user's sequence or in a sequence already in the database. This tool identifies all open reading frames using the standard or alternative genetic codes.
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 ...
Graphical analysis tool to find all open reading frames: Prokaryotes, Eukaryotes [40] Regulatory Sequence Analysis Tools: Series of modular computer programs to detect regulatory signals in non-coding sequences: Fungi, Prokaryotes, Metazoa, Protist, Plants [41] [42] PHANOTATE: A tool to annotate phage genomes. Phages [43] SplicePredictor
Logo Expasy 2020. Expasy is an online bioinformatics resource operated by the SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics.It is an extensible and integrative portal which provides access to over 160 databases and software tools and supports a range of life science and clinical research areas, from genomics, proteomics and structural biology, to evolution and phylogeny, systems biology and medical ...
An open reading frame (ORF) is a reading frame that has the potential to be transcribed into RNA and translated into protein. It requires a continuous sequence of DNA which may include a start codon, through a subsequent region which has a length that is a multiple of 3 nucleotides, to a stop codon in the same reading frame.
The tools available at ExPASy were used to predict post-translational modification sites on C16orf95. [16] The following modifications are predicted: palmitoylation, phosphorylation, and O-linked glycosylation. Bolded residues in the table indicate sites that are conserved in more than one species.
C7orf50, also known as YCR016W, MGC11257, and LOC84310, is a protein coding gene of poor characterization in need of further research. This gene can be accessed on NCBI at the accession number NC_000007.14, on HGNC at the ID number 22421, on ENSEMBL at the ID ENSG00000146540, on GeneCards at GCID:GC07M000996, and on UniProtKB at the ID Q9BRJ6.
[31] [32] This figure was created using the Expasy prosite tool. [33] For this image, it has a domain of unknown function spanning from 1 to 184 and a Nuclear localization sequence is in there from 105 to 109. [31] [32] The red circles represent post-translational modifications and the grey areas are where the start-codon and stop-codon are ...