Searching NMPDR for a specific gene or protein
The initial search option is a keyword search against the text of the data
records. Thus, it suffers from the same limitations as all keyword searches, such as
misspellings and presence or absence of synonyms. Most genes and gene products can be
described by several text strings. In this example, we will try to find an enzyme in
the folate biosynthesis pathway that has several common names, but one specific EC
number. The name of the gene that encodes the target enzyme has been named by several
groups working on different organisms. Any of the following terms may be used to
describe the target enzyme:
- 7,8-dihydro-6-hydroxymethylpterin-pyrophosphokinase
- hydroxymethylpterin pyrophosphokinase
- HPPK
- pyrophosphokinase
- sulD
- folK
- folate biosynthesis
- EC 2.7.6.3
- 2-amino-4-hydroxy-6-hydroxymethyldihydropteridine pyrophosphokinase
Use these terms to try a few different keyword searches in the box below.
Some of these terms will result in no hits, while some result in hundreds. Neither
option is useful. As with all keyword searches, there is an appropriate subset of the
above terms that will return the record of interest. If more than one term is entered,
they are joined with "AND" by default.
Search results are presented in tables that list a maximum of 50 proteins
per page. This default limit may be reset on the advanced search page. If the query
term matches records of proteins in NMPDR core organisms, these are returned at the top
of the list. For each result, the name of the organism, the ID andfunctional
assignment of the protein, and buttons to open the record are presented. There are two
environments for viewing the data record. The GBrowse button will open the generic
genome browser, and the NMPDR button will open the protein context page.
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