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  1. What are protein domains? | Protein classification - EMBL-EBI

    Domains are distinct functional and/or structural units in a protein. Usually they are responsible for a particular function or interaction, contributing to the overall role of a protein.

  2. InterPro - EMBL-EBI

    Oct 15, 2025 · Classification of protein families InterPro provides functional analysis of proteins by classifying them into families and predicting domains and important sites.

  3. Family- and domain-based protein classification - EMBL-EBI

    Family- and domain-based classifications are not always straightforward and can overlap, since proteins are sometimes assigned to families by virtue of the domain (s) they contain.

  4. Protein domains and features - EMBL-EBI

    Click on ‘Protein summary’ in the left-hand menu to see a graphical display of the protein domains (Figure 18). The exon structure is shown as alternating shade of purple at the top, while the …

  5. What are protein families? | Protein classification - EMBL-EBI

    A protein family is a group of proteins that share a common evolutionary origin, reflected by their related functions and similarities in sequence or structure.

  6. Summary | Protein classification - EMBL-EBI

    Domains are distinct functional and/or structural units in a protein that can exist in a variety of biological contexts. Sequence features include active sites, binding sites, post-translational …

  7. InterPro2GO mapping | European Bioinformatics Institute

    Signatures describing the same protein family or domain are grouped into unique InterPro entries. This InterPro resource is then applied across the UniProt KnowledgeBase, and all UniProtKB …

  8. EMBL-EBI

    EMBL-EBI

  9. InterProScan - InterPro

    We combine protein signatures from a number of member databases into a single searchable resource, capitalising on their individual strengths to produce a powerful integrated database …

  10. What are sequence features? | Protein classification - EMBL-EBI

    Sequence features differ from domains in that they are usually quite small (often only a few amino acids long), whereas domains represent entire structural or functional units of the protein …