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  1. The SCOP database, created by manual inspection and abetted by a battery of automated methods, aims to provide a detailed and comprehensive description of the structural and evolutionary relationships between all proteins whose structure is known.

  2. SCOPe (Structural Classification of Proteinsextended) is a database developed at the Berkeley Lab and UC Berkeley to extend the development and maintenance of SCOP. SCOP was conceived at the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, and developed in collaboration with researchers in Berkeley.

  3. The Structural Classification of Proteins (SCOP) database is a largely manual classification of protein structural domains based on similarities of their structures and amino acid sequences. A motivation for this classification is to determine the evolutionary relationship between proteins.

  4. www.scopus.com › sourcesScopus

    Scopus

  5. Jan 1, 2001 · The Structural Classification of Proteins (SCOP) database provides a detailed and comprehensive description of the relationships of known protein structures.

  6. SCOP is a (mostly) manually curated ordering of domains from the majority of proteins of known structure in a hierarchy according to structural and evolutionary relationships. Development of SCOP (version 1) concluded with SCOP 1.75, released in June 2009.

  7. SCOP 1.75 data Starting with SCOPe version 2.01, data from all versions of SCOPe , SCOP , and Astral since 1.55 are stored in a relational database. To download a copy of the MySQL database released with stable SCOPe 2.01 (sql.bz2 format), click here (309.2 MB) .

  8. scopeonline.in › homeHome - SCOPE

    Jun 5, 2024 · STUDIES. SCOPE EMINENCE AWARDS. Women in Public Sector (WIPS) WEBINAR SERIES. Commemorating World #EnvironmentDay, SCOPE organized a plantation program at its office premises at SCOPE Complex, New Delhi.

  9. The focus of SCOP is to structurally characterize the proteins that are deposited in the PDB. SCOP considers evolutionary and structural domains of proteins and classifies them in a hierarchical manner.

  10. The Structural Classification of Proteins (SCOP) data-base provides a detailed and comprehensive descrip-tion of the relationships of all known proteins struc-tures.

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