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© Oxford University Press

XFINGER: A tool for searching and visualising protein fingerprints and patterns

D.N. Perkins and T.K. Attwood 1,1

Departments of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, The University of Leeds Leeds, LS2 9JT, UK
1University College London London WC1E6BT, UK

1To whom correspondence and reprint requests should be addressed. Email:attwood{at}bsm.bioc.ucl.ac.uk

A tool for searching pattern and fingerprint databases is described. Fingerprints are groups of motifs excised from conserved regions of sequence alignments and used for iterative database scanning. The constituent motifs are thus encoded as small alignments in which sequence information is maximised with each database pass; they therefore differ from regular-expression patterns, in which alignments are reduced to single consensus sequences. Different database formats have evolved to store these disparate types of information, namely the PROSITE dictionary of patterns and the PRINTS fingerprint database, but programs have not been available with the flexibility to search them both. We have developed a facility to do this: the system allows query sequences to be scanned against either PROSITE, the full PRINTS database, or against individual fingerprints. The results of fingerprint searches are displayed simultaneously in both text and graphical windows to render them more tangible to the user. Where structural coordinates are available, identified motifs may be visualised in a 3D context. The program runs on Silicon Graphics machines using GL graphics libraries and on machines with X servers supporting the PEX extension: its use is illustrated here by depicting the location of low-density lipoprotein-binding (LDL) motifs and leucine-rich repeats in a mosaic G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR).


Received on June 30, 1995; accepted on January 1, 1996

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