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Michele Magrane

Researcher at European Bioinformatics Institute

Publications -  47
Citations -  32291

Michele Magrane is an academic researcher from European Bioinformatics Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: UniProt & Annotation. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 42 publications receiving 25025 citations. Previous affiliations of Michele Magrane include Georgetown University Medical Center & Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics.

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UniProt: the Universal Protein knowledgebase

TL;DR: The Swiss-Prot, TrEMBL and PIR protein database activities have united to form the Universal Protein Knowledgebase (UniProt), which is to provide a comprehensive, fully classified, richly and accurately annotated protein sequence knowledgebase, with extensive cross-references and query interfaces.
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The Universal Protein Resource (UniProt)

TL;DR: During 2004, tens of thousands of Knowledgebase records got manually annotated or updated; the UniProt keyword list got augmented by additional keywords; the documentation of the keywords and are continuously overhauling and standardizing the annotation of post-translational modifications.
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UniProt: A hub for protein information

Alex Bateman, +127 more
TL;DR: An annotation score for all entries in UniProt is introduced to represent the relative amount of knowledge known about each protein to help identify which proteins are the best characterized and most informative for comparative analysis.
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UniProt: the universal protein knowledgebase in 2021

Alex Bateman, +132 more
TL;DR: The UniProtKB responded to the COVID-19 pandemic through expert curation of relevant entries that were rapidly made available to the research community through a dedicated portal and a credit-based publication submission interface was developed.
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The Gene Ontology resource: enriching a GOld mine

Seth Carbon, +179 more
TL;DR: A historical archive covering the past 15 years of GO data with a consistent format and file structure for both the ontology and annotations is made available to maintain consistency with other ontologies.