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WikiDoc Resources for Swiss-Prot |
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Articles |
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Most recent articles on Swiss-Prot |
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Media |
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Evidence Based Medicine |
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Clinical Trials |
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Ongoing Trials on Swiss-Prot at Clinical Trials.gov Clinical Trials on Swiss-Prot at Google
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Guidelines / Policies / Govt |
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US National Guidelines Clearinghouse on Swiss-Prot
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Books |
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News |
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Commentary |
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Definitions |
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Patient Resources / Community |
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Patient resources on Swiss-Prot Discussion groups on Swiss-Prot Patient Handouts on Swiss-Prot Directions to Hospitals Treating Swiss-Prot Risk calculators and risk factors for Swiss-Prot
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Healthcare Provider Resources |
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Causes & Risk Factors for Swiss-Prot |
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Continuing Medical Education (CME) |
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International |
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Business |
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Experimental / Informatics |
Swiss-Prot is a manually curated biological database of protein sequences. Swiss-Prot was created in 1986 by Amos Bairoch during his PhD and developed by the Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics and the European Bioinformatics Institute.[1] Swiss-Prot strives to provide reliable protein sequences associated with a high level of annotation (such as the description of the function of a protein, its domains structure, post-translational modifications, variants, etc.), a minimal level of redundancy and high level of integration with other databases.
In 2002, the UniProt consortium was created: it is a collaboration between the Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics, the European Bioinfomatics Institute and the Protein Information Resource (PIR), funded by the National Institutes of Health. Swiss-Prot and its automatically curated supplement TrEMBL, have joined with the Protein Information Resource protein database to produce the UniProt Knowledgebase, the world's most comprehensive catalogue of information on proteins.[2] As of 3 April 2007, UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot release 52.2 contains 263,525 entries. As of 3 April 2007, the UniProtKB/TrEMBL release 35.2 contains 4,232,122 entries.
The UniProt consortium produced 3 database components, each optimised for different uses. The UniProt Knowledgebase (UniProtKB (Swiss-Prot + TrEMBL)), the UniProt Non-redundant Reference (UniRef) databases, which combine closely related sequences into a single record to speed similarity searches and the UniProt Archive (UniParc), which is a comprehensive repository of protein sequences, reflecting the history of all protein sequences.
|title= (help) — a historical account by Bairoch.