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- SCOPe: Structural Classification of Proteins — extended. Release 2. 08 . . .
SCOPe (Structural Classification of Proteins — extended) 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
- SCOP| Structural Classification of Proteins - EMBL-EBI
SCOP classification of proteins aims to provide comprehensive structural and evolutionary relationships between all proteins whose structure is known
- SCOP2 - RCSB PDB Help
The Structural Classification of Proteins (SCOP) database was created in the 1990s by mostly manual inspection and by ordering domains of known protein structures according to a hierarchy based on structural and evolutionary relationships (Murzin et al , 1995)
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- Structural Classification of Proteins database - Wikipedia
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
- SCOP: Introduction
The SCOP database aims to provide a detailed and comprehensive description of the structural and evolutionary relationships between all proteins whose structure is known, including all entries in the Protein Data Bank (PDB)
- SCOP: a Structural Classification of Proteins database - PMC
The Structural Classification of Proteins (SCOP) database provides a detailed and comprehensive description of the relationships of known protein structures
- SCOPe: improvements to the structural classification of proteins . . .
First released to the public 27 years ago, the Structural Classification of Proteins (SCOP) database (1–4) was a manually curated hierarchy of domains from all proteins of known structure, organized according to their structural and evolutionary relationships
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