Publication | Open Access
CDD: specific functional annotation with the Conserved Domain Database
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Citations
14
References
2008
Year
EngineeringStructural BioinformaticsDomain FootprintsMolecular BiologyConserved Domain DatabaseAnnotation ServiceSemantic WebBioinformatics DatabaseData ScienceDomain AnnotationProteomicsBiological DatabaseKnowledge DiscoveryOmicsProtein Structure PredictionFunctional GenomicsBioinformaticsProtein BioinformaticsStructural BiologyBiologyGene Sequence AnnotationComputational BiologySystems BiologyMedicine
NCBI's Conserved Domain Database (CDD) is a collection of multiple sequence alignments and derived database search models, which represent protein domains conserved in molecular evolution. The collection can be accessed at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Structure/cdd/cdd.shtml, and is also part of NCBI's Entrez query and retrieval system, cross-linked to numerous other resources. CDD provides annotation of domain footprints and conserved functional sites on protein sequences. Precalculated domain annotation can be retrieved for protein sequences tracked in NCBI's Entrez system, and CDD's collection of models can be queried with novel protein sequences via the CD-Search service at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Structure/cdd/wrpsb.cgi. Starting with the latest version of CDD, v2.14, information from redundant and homologous domain models is summarized at a superfamily level, and domain annotation on proteins is flagged as either 'specific' (identifying molecular function with high confidence) or as 'non-specific' (identifying superfamily membership only).
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