MOTIVATION: Sequence similarity searches are of great importance in bioinformatics. Exhaustive searches for homologous proteins in databases are computationally expensive and can be replaced by a database of pre-calculated homologies in many cases. Retrieving similarities from an incrementally updated database instead of repeatedly recalculating them should provide homologs much faster and frees computational resources for other purposes. RESULTS: We have implemented SIMAP-a database containing the similarity space formed by almost all amino acid sequences from public databases and completely sequenced genomes. The database is capable of handling very large datasets and allows incremental updates. We have implemented a powerful backbone for similarity computation, which is based on FASTA heuristics. By providing WWW interfaces as well as web services, we make our data accessible to the worldwide community. We have also adapted procedures to detect putative orthologs as example applications. AVAILABILITY: The SIMAP portal page providing links to SIMAP services is publicly available: http://mips.gsf.de/services/analysis/simap/. The web services can be accessed under http://mips.gsf.de/proj/hobitws/services/RPCSimapService?wsdl and http://mips.gsf.de/proj/hobitws/services/DocSimapService?wsdl
MOTIVATION: Sequence similarity searches are of great importance in bioinformatics. Exhaustive searches for homologous proteins in databases are computationally expensive and can be replaced by a database of pre-calculated homologies in many cases. Retrieving similarities from an incrementally updated database instead of repeatedly recalculating them should provide homologs much faster and frees computational resources for other purposes. RESULTS: We have implemented SIMAP-a database containing the similarity space formed by almost all amino acid sequences from public databases and completely sequenced genomes. The database is capable of handling very large datasets and allows incremental updates. We have implemented a powerful backbone for similarity computation, which is based on FASTA heuristics. By providing WWW interfaces as well as web services, we make our data accessible to the worldwide community. We have also adapted procedures to detect putative orthologs as example applications. AVAILABILITY: The SIMAP portal page providing links to SIMAP services is publicly available: http://mips.gsf.de/services/analysis/simap/. The web services can be accessed under http://mips.gsf.de/proj/hobitws/services/RPCSimapService?wsdl and http://mips.gsf.de/proj/hobitws/services/DocSimapService?wsdl
Authors: Teresa M Maia; Susana T Lopes; João M G C F Almeida; Luiz H Rosa; José Paulo Sampaio; Paula Gonçalves; Marco A Coelho Journal: Genetics Date: 2015-07-14 Impact factor: 4.562
Authors: Stefan Götz; Roland Arnold; Patricia Sebastián-León; Samuel Martín-Rodríguez; Patrick Tischler; Marc-André Jehl; Joaquín Dopazo; Thomas Rattei; Ana Conesa Journal: Bioinformatics Date: 2011-02-18 Impact factor: 6.937
Authors: Thomas Rattei; Patrick Tischler; Roland Arnold; Franz Hamberger; Jörg Krebs; Jan Krumsiek; Benedikt Wachinger; Volker Stümpflen; Werner Mewes Journal: Nucleic Acids Res Date: 2007-11-23 Impact factor: 16.971
Authors: Thomas Rattei; Patrick Tischler; Stefan Götz; Marc-André Jehl; Jonathan Hoser; Roland Arnold; Ana Conesa; Hans-Werner Mewes Journal: Nucleic Acids Res Date: 2009-11-11 Impact factor: 16.971