Database Commons
Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

PDBeFold

General information

URL: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/dali/domain
Full name: PDBeFold
Description: (i) supersecondary structural motifs (attractors in fold space), (ii) the topology of globular domains (fold types), (iii) remote homologues (functional families) and (iv) homologues with sequence identity above 25% (sequence families).
Year founded: 2001
Last update:
Version:
Accessibility:
Accessible
Country/Region: United Kingdom

Classification & Tag

Data type:
Data object:
NA
Database category:
Major species:
NA
Keywords:

Contact information

University/Institution: European Bioinformatics Institute
Address: Structural Genomics Group, EMBL-EBI, Cambridge CB10 1SD, UK
City:
Province/State:
Country/Region: United Kingdom
Contact name (PI/Team): Liisa Holm
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): ku.ca.ibe@mloh

Publications

11125048
A fully automatic evolutionary classification of protein folds: Dali Domain Dictionary version 3. [PMID: 11125048]
Dietmann S, Park J, Notredame C, Heger A, Lappe M, Holm L.

The Dali Domain Dictionary (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/dali/domain) is a numerical taxonomy of all known structures in the Protein Data Bank (PDB). The taxonomy is derived fully automatically from measurements of structural, functional and sequence similarities. Here, we report the extension of the classification to match the traditional four hierarchical levels corresponding to: (i) supersecondary structural motifs (attractors in fold space), (ii) the topology of globular domains (fold types), (iii) remote homologues (functional families) and (iv) homologues with sequence identity above 25% (sequence families). The computational definitions of attractors and functional families are new. In September 2000, the Dali classification contained 10 531 PDB entries comprising 17 101 chains, which were partitioned into five attractor regions, 1375 fold types, 2582 functional families and 3724 domain sequence families. Sequence families were further associated with 99 582 unique homologous sequences in the HSSP database, which increases the number of effectively known structures several-fold. The resulting database contains the description of protein domain architecture, the definition of structural neighbours around each known structure, the definition of structurally conserved cores and a comprehensive library of explicit multiple alignments of distantly related protein families.

Nucleic Acids Res. 2001:29(1) | 129 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-13)

Ranking

All databases:
2310/6895 (66.512%)
Structure:
325/967 (66.494%)
2310
Total Rank
125
Citations
5.208
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Record metadata

Created on: 2018-02-08
Curated by:
Lina Ma [2018-12-20]
Lina Ma [2018-06-05]
Zhaohua Li [2018-03-12]
Pei Wang [2018-02-08]