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Superfamily database

SUPERFAMILY is a database and search platform of structural


and functional annotation for all proteins and
SUPERFAMILY
genomes. [1][2][3][4][5][6][7] It classifies amino acid sequences into Content
known structural domains, especially into SCOP Description The
superfamilies. [8][9] Domains are functional, structural, and SUPERFAMILY
evolutionary units that form proteins. Domains of common
database
Ancestry are grouped into superfamilies. The domains and domain
provides
superfamilies are defined and described in SCOP.[8][10]
structural and
Superfamilies are groups of proteins which have structural
evidence to support a common evolutionary ancestor but may not functional
have detectable sequence homology.[11] annotation for all
proteins and
genomes.
Annotations
Data types Protein families,
The SUPERFAMILY annotation is based on a collection of hidden captured genome
Markov models (HMM), which represent structural protein annotation,
domains at the SCOP superfamily level.[12] [13] A superfamily alignments,
groups together domains which have an evolutionary relationship. Hidden Markov
The annotation is produced by scanning protein sequences from models (HMMs)
completely sequenced genomes against the hidden Markov Organisms all
models.
Contact
For each protein you can: Research center University of
Bristol
Submit sequences for SCOP classification
View domain organisation, sequence alignments and Laboratory Julian Gough
protein sequence details Cyrus Chothia

For each genome you can: Primary citation PMID 19036790


(https://pubmed.
Examine superfamily assignments, phylogenetic trees, ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/
domain organisation lists and networks 19036790)
Check for over- and under-represented superfamilies Access
within a genome
Data format FASTA format
For each superfamily you can: Website supfam.org (htt
p://supfam.org)
Inspect SCOP classification, functional annotation,
Gene Ontology annotation,[6][14] InterPro abstract and Download URL supfam.org
genome assignments /SUPERFAMILY
Explore taxonomic distribution of a superfamily across /downloads.html
the tree of life (http://supfam.or
g/SUPERFAMIL
Y/downloads.ht
ml)
All annotation, models and the database dump are freely available Miscellaneous
for download to everyone.
License GNU General
Public License
Features Version 1.75

Sequence Search

Submit a protein or DNA sequence for SCOP superfamily and family level classification using the
SUPERFAMILY HMM's. Sequences can be submitted either by raw input or by uploading a file, but all
must be in FASTA format. Sequences can be amino acids, a fixed frame nucleotide sequence, or all frames
of a submitted nucleotide sequence. Up to 1000 sequences can be run at a time.

Keyword Search

Search the database using a superfamily, family, or species name plus a sequence, SCOP, PDB, or HMM
ID's. A successful search yields the class, folds, superfamilies, families, and individual proteins matching
the query.

Domain Assignments

The database has domain assignments, alignments, and architectures for completely sequence eukaryotic
and prokaryotic organisms, plus sequence collections.

Comparative Genomics Tools

Browse unusual (over- and under-represented) superfamilies and families, adjacent domain pair lists and
graphs, unique domain pairs, domain combinations, domain architecture co-occurrence networks, and
domain distribution across taxonomic kingdoms for each organism.

Genome Statistics

For each genome: number of sequences, number of sequences with assignment, percentage of sequences
with assignment, percentage total sequence coverage, number of domains assigned, number of
superfamilies assigned, number of families assigned, average superfamily size, percentage produced by
duplication, average sequence length, average length matched, number of domain pairs, and number of
unique domain architectures.

Gene Ontology

Domain-centric Gene Ontology (GO) automatically annotated.

Due to the growing gap between sequenced proteins and known functions of proteins, it is becoming
increasingly important to develop a more automated method for functionally annotating proteins, especially
for proteins with known domains. SUPERFAMILY uses protein-level GO annotations taken from the
Genome Ontology Annotation (GOA) project, which offers high-quality GO annotations directly
associated to proteins in the UniprotKB over a wide spectrum of species.[15] SUPERFAMILY has
generated GO annotations for evolutionarily closed domains (at the SCOP family level) and distant
domains (at the SCOP superfamily level).

Phenotype Ontology
Domain-centric phenotype/anatomy ontology including Disease Ontology, Human Phenotype, Mouse
Phenotype, Worm Phenotype, Yeast Phenotype, Fly Phenotype, Fly Anatomy, Zebrafish Anatomy,
Xenopus Anatomy, and Arabidopsis Plant.

Superfamily Annotation

InterPro abstracts for over 1,000 superfamilies, and Gene Ontology (GO) annotation for over 700
superfamilies. This feature allows for the direct annotation of key features, functions, and structures of a
superfamily.

Functional Annotation

Functional annotation of SCOP 1.73 superfamilies.

The SUPERFAMILY database uses a scheme of 50 detailed function categories which map to 7 general
function categories, similar to the scheme used in the COG database.[16] A general function assigned to a
superfamily was used to reflect the major function for that superfamily. The general categories of function
are:

1. Information: storage, maintenance of genetic code; DNA replication and repair; general
transcription and translation.
2. Regulation: Regulation of gene expression and protein activity; information processing in
response to environmental input; signal transduction; general regulatory or receptor activity.
3. Metabolism: Anabolic and catabolic processes; cell maintenance and homeostasis;
secondary metabolism.
4. Intra-cellular processes: cell motility and division; cell death; intra-cellular transport;
secretion.
5. Extra-cellular processes: inter-, extr-cellular processes like cell adhesion; organismal
process like blood clotting or the immune system.
6. General: General and multiple functions; interactions with proteins, lipids, small molecules,
and ions.
7. Other/Unknown: an unknown function, viral proteins, or toxins.

Each domain superfamily in SCOP classes a to g were manually annotated using this scheme[17][18][19] and
the information used was provided by SCOP,[10] InterPro,[20][21] Pfam,[22] Swiss Prot,[23] and various
literature sources.

Phylogenetic Trees

Create custom phylogenetic trees by selecting 3 or more available genomes on the SUPERFAMILY site.
Trees are generated using heuristic parsimony methods, and are based on protein domain architecture data
for all genomes in SUPERFAMILY. Genome combinations, or specific clades, can be displayed as
individual trees.

Similar Domain Architectures

This feature allows the user to find the 10 domain architectures which are most similar to the domain
architecture of interest.

Hidden Markov Models

Produce SCOP domain assignments for a sequence using the SUPERFAMILY hidden Markov models.
Profile Comparison

Find remote domain matches when the HMM search fails to find a significant match. Profile comparison
(PRC)[24] for aligning and scoring two profile HMM's are used.

Web Services

Distributed Annotation Server and linking to SUPERFAMILY.

Downloads

Sequences, assignments, models, MySQL database, and scripts - updated weekly.

Use in Research
The SUPERFAMILY database has numerous research applications and has been used by many research
groups for various studies. It can serve either as a database for proteins that the user wishes to examine with
other methods, or to assign a function and structure to a novel or uncharacterized protein. One study found
SUPERFAMILY to be very adept at correctly assigning an appropriate function and structure to a large
number of domains of unknown function by comparing them to the databases hidden Markov models.[25]
Another study used SUPERFAMILY to generate a data set of 1,733 Fold superfamily domains (FSF) in
use of a comparison of proteomes and functionomes for to identify the origin of cellular diversification.[26]

References
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External links
SUPERFAMILY database (http://supfam.org/SUPERFAMILY/)
SCOP: Structural Classification of Proteins (https://web.archive.org/web/20070911012207/ht
tp://scop.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk/scop/)
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Superfamily_database&oldid=1166578936"

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