| Literature DB >> 29041922 |
Jing Zuo1, Jian Li2, Rongxin Zhang1, Longsheng Xu1, Hanhan Chen1, Xiaohuan Jia1, Zhipeng Su1, Linhong Zhao1, Xing Huang1, Wei Xie3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Nanobodies are single-domain antibodies that contain the unique structural and functional properties of naturally-occurring heavy chain in camelidae. As a novel class of antibody, they show many advantages compared with traditional antibodies such as smaller size, higher stability, improved specificity, more easily expressed in microorganisms. These unusual hallmarks make them as promising tools in basic research and clinical practice. Although thousands of nanobodies are known to be published, no single database provides searchable, unified annotation and integrative analysis tools for these various nanobodies.Entities:
Keywords: Database; Nanobody; Nanobody sequence analysis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29041922 PMCID: PMC5646159 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-017-4204-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Fig. 1The architecture of iCAN website. iCAN website includes eight interfaces and five frequently used tools. The blue line represents the information flow
Fig. 2The pie chart of nanobody’s source organism and applicaiton. a The taxonomy of nanobody’s source organism in iCAN. The proportion of nanobodies’ source organisms is shown in different colors. The unknown are not included in this chart. b The applications of nanobodies in iCAN database. The related proportion of different applications is shown. The unknown are not included in this chart
Fig. 3The example result of Blast and Motif tool. a The example result of Blast in iCAN. The top 10 significant alignments and related E-values are shown. b The example result of Motif tool in iCAN. One stack represents one position in the sequence. The sequence conservation at each position can be seen from the overall height of each stack, while the relative frequency of each amino acid at that position is indicated by the height of symbols within the stack