Forthcoming changes
Planned changes for UniProt
Planned changes for UniProt
Plasma membrane rupture during cell death: from a passive hypothesis to an active process | Changes to the controlled vocabulary of human diseases
Oocyte waste disposal strategy: 'store to degrade later' | Removal of the cross-references to CLAE | Removal of the cross-references to COMPLUYEAST-2DPAGE
The culprit for extreme morning sickness identified | Removal of the cross-references to Genevisible | Removal of the cross-references to SWISS-2DPAGE
CMV infections: plants beaten at their own game | Changes to the controlled vocabulary of human diseases | Changes to the controlled vocabulary for PTMs
Vitamin K beyond coagulation | Cross-references to EMDB | Cross-references to JaponicusDB | Changes to the controlled vocabulary...
In recent years a wealth of information has become available about genetic variations that underlie various diseases, especially cancer.
A conversation with machine learning engineer Andreea Gane. At UniProt we are very interested in engaging with the machine learning community
When humans migrated from Africa to other parts of the globe, they carried with them a certain set of genes. Over the many thousands of years that have passed since, a good deal of these genes have been subjected to minor or perhaps major changes as our…
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UniProt provides the scientific community with a freely accessible collection of protein sequence and functional information and is one of the most widely used protein resources in the world. This webinar will cover what functional information is available in UniProt and where that information comes from. It will also describe how the information is added to the resource and how to find it on the UniProt website.