| Literature DB >> 28173698 |
Robert Sidney Cox1, James Alastair McLaughlin2, Raik Grünberg3, Jacob Beal4, Anil Wipat2, Herbert M Sauro5.
Abstract
As protein engineering becomes more sophisticated, practitioners increasingly need to share diagrams for communicating protein designs. To this end, we present a draft visual language, Protein Language, that describes the high-level architecture of an engineered protein with easy-to-draw glyphs, intended to be compatible with other biological diagram languages such as SBOL Visual and SBGN. Protein Language consists of glyphs for representing important features (e.g., globular domains, recognition and localization sequences, sites of covalent modification, cleavage and catalysis), rules for composing these glyphs to represent complex architectures, and rules constraining the scaling and styling of diagrams. To support Protein Language we have implemented an extensible web-based software diagram tool, Protein Designer, that uses Protein Language in a "drag and drop" interface for visualization and computer-aided-design of engineered proteins, as well as conversion of annotated protein sequences to Protein Language diagrams and figure export. Protein Designer can be accessed at http://biocad.ncl.ac.uk/protein-designer/ .Entities:
Keywords: Synthetic Biology Open Language; genetic circuits; protein engineering; synthetic biology; visualization
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28173698 DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.6b00286
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Synth Biol ISSN: 2161-5063 Impact factor: 5.110