Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

have systems code page get autogenerated #5

Open
egonw opened this issue Jun 5, 2021 · 5 comments
Open

have systems code page get autogenerated #5

egonw opened this issue Jun 5, 2021 · 5 comments
Assignees
Labels
enhancement New feature or request

Comments

@egonw
Copy link
Member

egonw commented Jun 5, 2021

The Markdown for https://bridgedb.github.io/pages/system-codes.html should be autogenerated.

@egonw egonw added the enhancement New feature or request label Jun 5, 2021
@egonw egonw self-assigned this Jun 5, 2021
@egonw
Copy link
Member Author

egonw commented Jun 5, 2021

And should include the prefix too...

@DeniseSl22
Copy link
Contributor

Agreed, now we also (still) list UniProt Trembl vs Swissprot, which has been merged in one (UniProt):
image

@egonw
Copy link
Member Author

egonw commented Jan 18, 2023

It has not been merged yet. It's complicated because several tools use string matching to look up a data source. So, the system code S needs to be linked to the full name Uniprot-TrEMBL and UniProt. I am not sure that works and have not had time to test that with BridgeDb yet. Maybe at the upcoming hackathon?

@Chris-Evelo
Copy link
Contributor

There is a real content difference between UniProt and trEMBL even though they are merged into UniProt. trEMBL is translated EMBL and thus in principle is about hypothetical proteins. UniProt is about biochemically known proteins. So during analysis, you typically can want to figure out to which set a protein belongs. For human, that might no longer be relevant assuming that not only have most real proteins been found but also that all really hypothetical and probably non-existent proteins have been annotated as such. But I would think it is still relevant for other species.

@egonw
Copy link
Member Author

egonw commented Jan 19, 2023

There is a real content difference between UniProt and trEMBL even though they are merged into UniProt. trEMBL is translated EMBL and thus in principle is about hypothetical proteins. UniProt is about biochemically known proteins. So during analysis, you typically can want to figure out to which set a protein belongs. For human, that might no longer be relevant assuming that not only have most real proteins been found but also that all really hypothetical and probably non-existent proteins have been annotated as such. But I would think it is still relevant for other species.

Yes, I know. This issue is not about that. UniProt is now an integrated resource and we can use a federate approach to see if a UniProt entry is in TrEBML or SwissProt.

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
enhancement New feature or request
Projects
None yet
Development

No branches or pull requests

3 participants