Difference between revisions of "Hivanson and Nstojan1 Week 3"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(→IMD3: added instructions from week 3 (Temporary)) |
(→Summary of Function: added Other Information title) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
==IMD3== | ==IMD3== | ||
===Summary of Function=== | ===Summary of Function=== | ||
− | + | ===Other Information:=== | |
#What is the standard name, systematic name, and name description for your gene (from SGD)? | #What is the standard name, systematic name, and name description for your gene (from SGD)? | ||
#What is the gene ID (identifier) for your gene in all four databases (SGD, NCBI Gene, Ensembl, UniProt)? | #What is the gene ID (identifier) for your gene in all four databases (SGD, NCBI Gene, Ensembl, UniProt)? |
Revision as of 17:49, 31 January 2024
IMD3
Summary of Function
Other Information:
- What is the standard name, systematic name, and name description for your gene (from SGD)?
- What is the gene ID (identifier) for your gene in all four databases (SGD, NCBI Gene, Ensembl, UniProt)?
- Provide hyperlinks to the specific pages for your gene in each of the above databases.
- What is the DNA sequence of your gene?
- What is the protein sequence corresponding to your gene?
- Go to the ExPASy tool and translate the DNA sequence of your gene. Which reading frame encodes the protein sequence? Take a screenshot of your results, display it on your wiki page, and state which frame it is.
- What is the function of your gene?
- What was different about the information provided about your gene in each of the parent databases?
- Were there differences in content, the information or data itself?
- Were there differences in presentation of the information?
- Why did you choose your particular gene? i.e., why is it interesting to you and your partner?
- Include an image related to your gene (be careful that you do not violate any copyright restrictions!)
- Please make the image something scientific (not like the random images seen on the SGD blog posts).
- If a 3D structure of the protein your gene encodes is available, you can choose to embed a rotating image of the structure on your page using the FirstGlance in Jmol software. This is optional, a different static image would be OK, too.
- The NCBI Structure database and RSCB Protein Databank also display structures.