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Full Guidance On Amino Acid/Protein Databases For Beginners

Posted By: ELK1nG
Full Guidance On Amino Acid/Protein Databases For Beginners

Full Guidance On Amino Acid/Protein Databases For Beginners
Published 8/2022
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 379.64 MB | Duration: 1h 3m

Complete Beginner's Guide of Top Amino Acid/Protein Databases used in Bioinformatics along with their Utilization

What you'll learn
You will learn 15+ Amino Acid / Protein Different Databases used in Bioinformatics
You will learn the Whole Concept of Databases
You will learn about the Primary Databases in Bioinformatics
You will learn about the Secondary Databases in Bioinformatics
You will learn about the Amino Acid / Protein Databases in Bioinformatics
Complete up-to Date Beginner's Guide of top Amino Acid / Protein Used in Bioinformatics along with their utilization
Tools Used in Amino Acid / Protein Databases
Requirements
Basic Bioinformatics terms
Basic Understanding of Biology and Bioinformatics
Willingness to learn
Good Internet and notebook to note down the lectures
Description
This Bioinformatics course is going to game changer for you. Currently, there is an explosion of biological data. Bioinformatics is at the intersection of biology and computer science.What is Bioinformatics ?In biology, bioinformatics is defined as, “the use of computer to store, retrieve, analyze or predict the composition or structure of bio-molecules” . Bioinformatics is the application of computational techniques and information technology to the organization and management of biological data. Classical bioinformatics deals primarily with sequence analysis.Aims of BioinformaticsDevelopment of database containing all biological information.Development of better tools for data designing, annotation and mining.Design and development of drugs by using simulation software.Design and development of software tools for protein structure prediction function, annotation and docking analysis.Creation and development of software to improve tools for analyzing sequences for their function and similarity with other sequencesBiological DatabasesBiological data are complex, exception-ridden, vast, and incomplete. Therefore several databases have been created and interpreted to ensure unambiguous results. A collection of biological data arranged in a computer-readable form that enhances the speed of search and retrieval and convenient to use is called a biological database. A good database must have updated information.Importance of Biological DatabaseA range of information like biological sequences, structures, binding sites, metabolic interactions, molecular action, functional relationships, protein families, motifs and homologous can be retrieved by using biological databases. The main purpose of a biological database is to store and manage biological data and information in computer readable forms.In this course we learned about the different biological databases that are being used in bioinformatics and get to know a little bit about their details. Mainly these databases are divided into four categories and we learned about them base by base. And explained the difference among the primary and secondary database and explained their utilization in bioinformatics.Amino acid / protein databasesSeveral publicly available data repositories and resources have been developed to support and manage protein related information, biological knowledge discovery and data-driven hypothesis generation. The databases in the table below are selected from the databases listed in the Nucleic Acids Research (NAR) databases issues and database collection and the databases cross-referenced in the UniProtKB. Most of these databases are cross-referenced with UniProt / UniProtKB so that identifiers can be mapped to each other.                        Sequence databasesCCDS                       The Consensus CDS protein set database DDB                         JDNA Data Bank of JapanENA                         European Nucleotide ArchiveGenBank                GenBank nucleotide sequence databaseRefseq                    NCBI Reference Sequence DatabaseUniGene                 Database of computationally identifies transcripts from the same locus UniProtKB              Universal Protein Resource (UniProt)               3D structure protein databasesDisProt                                 Database of Protein DisorderMobiDB                                Database of intrinsically disordered and mobile proteinsModBase                             Database of Comparative Protein Structure ModelsPDBsum                               Pictorial database of 3D structures in the Protein Data BankProteinModelPortal           Protein Model Portal of the PSI-Nature Structural Biology KnowledgebaseSMR                                     Database of annotated 3D protein structure modelsThis course will be extremely helpful to students of data analyst and bioinformaticians because they use the databases a lot in their work.If you guys have any questions or suggestions please let me know in instructor inbox I’ll try to answer all of your questions within 12 hours.

Overview

Section 1: Introduction to Bioinformatics Databases

Lecture 1 Introduction of Bioinformatics Databases

Lecture 2 Types of Biological Databases

Lecture 3 Difference between Primary & Secondary Databases

Section 2: Primary & Secondary Databases

Lecture 4 Introduction of Primary Databases

Lecture 5 Explaining Primary Databases

Lecture 6 Introduction of Secondary Databases

Lecture 7 Explaining Secondary Databases

Section 3: Protein Sequence Databases

Lecture 8 Introduction of Protein Sequence Databases

Lecture 9 Explaining Protein Sequence Databases

Section 4: Protein Structure Databases

Lecture 10 Introduction of Protein Structure Databases

Lecture 11 Explaining Protein Structure Databases

Section 5: Protein Model Databases (PMDB)

Lecture 12 Introduction of Protein Model Databases

Lecture 13 Explaining Protein Model Databases (PMDB)

Section 6: Protein-Protein and Other Molecular Interactions

Lecture 14 Introduction of Protein-Protein and Other Molecular Interactions

Lecture 15 Explaining Protein-Protein and Other Molecular Interactions

Section 7: Protein Expression Databases

Lecture 16 Introduction of Protein Expression Databases

Lecture 17 Explaining Protein Expression Databases

Bioinformaticians are Encouraged to take this course.,Data Scientist are Encouraged to take this course,Researchers are also encouraged to take this Course,Anyone who wants to learn something NEW.