NBRF/PIR Format: A sequence in PIR format consists of:
1. One line starting with 1. a "*>*" (greater-than) sign, followed by 2. a two-letter code describing the sequence type (P1, F1, DL, DC, RL, RC, or XX), followed by 3. a semicolon, followed by 4. the sequence identification code (the database ID-code). 2. One line containing a textual description of the sequence. 3. One or more lines containing the sequence itself. The end of the sequence is marked by a "***" (asterisk) character Sequence type -> Code -------------------------------- Protein (complete) -> P1 Protein (fragment) -> F1 DNA (linear) -> DL DNA (circular) -> DC RNA (linear) -> RL RNA (circular) -> RC tRNA -> N3 other functional RNA -> N1 Example: >P1;CRAB_ANAPL ALPHA CRYSTALLIN B CHAIN (ALPHA(B)-CRYSTALLIN). MDITIHNPLI RRPLFSWLAP SRIFDQIFGE HLQESELLPA SPSLSPFLMR SPIFRMPSWL ETGLSEMRLE KDKFSVNLDV KHFSPEELKV KVLGDMVEIH GKHEERQDEH GFIAREFNRK YRIPADVDPL TITSSLSLDG VLTVSAPRKQ SDVPERSIPI TREEKPAIAG AQRK* hope this info helps suku On Fri, Aug 12, 2011 at 6:11 PM, Phil Evans <p...@mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk> wrote: > That's what I had > > > protein > > GSP etc > ... > SEN* > > > On 12 Aug 2011, at 09:19, Antony Oliver wrote: > > > PIR is fairly similar to Fasta, from addled memory the format is... > > > >> protein name; > > ----empty line---- > > MPREIL...rest of amino acid sequence with an optional asterisk to mark > the sequence end. > > > > Tony > > > > Sent from my iPhone > > > > On 12 Aug 2011, at 09:14, "Phil Evans" <p...@mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk> wrote: > > > >> Can anyone get this server to work? For me it keeps complaining that my > sequence file is not a PIR file. The file looks OK to me, but I've never > really understood what a PIR file is > >> > >> Phil > >> > >> On 12 Aug 2011, at 01:39, Kevin Jin wrote: > >> > >>> > >>> Should we really have some crystallographers to review and qc those > structures before the formal releasing? JCSG has set a very good mechanism > for this issue. > >>> > >>> There is a sever for self check. > >>> > >>> http://smb.slac.stanford.edu/jcsg/QC/ > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 4:58 PM, Jacob Keller < > j-kell...@fsm.northwestern.edu> wrote: > >>> I think they fudged the data in this paper... > >>> > >>> JPK > >>> > >>> On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 6:30 PM, David Schuller <dj...@cornell.edu> > wrote: > >>>> link: http://iai.asm.org/cgi/reprint/IAI.05661-11v1 > >>>> > >>>> Ferric C. Fang & Arturo Casadevall > >>>> Retracted Science and the Retraction Index > >>>> Infec. Immun. doi:10.1128/IAI.05661-11 > >>>> > >>>> Abstract: Articles may be retracted when their findings are no longer > >>>> considered trustworthy due to scientific misconduct or error, they > >>>> plagiarize previously published work, or are found to violate ethical > >>>> guidelines. Using a novel measure that we call the “retraction index,” > we > >>>> found that the frequency of retraction varies among journals and shows > a > >>>> strong correlation with the journal impact factor. > >>>> ... > >>>> > >>>> (with special attention to Figure 1, Retraction Index vs. Impact > Factor) > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> -- > >>>> > ======================================================================= > >>>> All Things Serve the Beam > >>>> > ======================================================================= > >>>> David J. Schuller > >>>> modern man in a post-modern world > >>>> MacCHESS, Cornell University > >>>> schul...@cornell.edu > >>>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> -- > >>> ******************************************* > >>> Jacob Pearson Keller > >>> Northwestern University > >>> Medical Scientist Training Program > >>> cel: 773.608.9185 > >>> email: j-kell...@northwestern.edu > >>> ******************************************* > >>> >