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Figure 2 | Genome Biology

Figure 2

From: Most partial domains in proteins are alignment and annotation artifacts

Figure 2

Complete, bounded, and unbounded partial domains. A complete domain, and three types of partial Pfam27 domain mappings. (A) Annotation of the complete [Pfam:PF01544] domain in Bacillus anthracis CorA protein [UniProt:B3J323]. The full length of the Pfam27 domain is shown in light green, as are the coordinates of the aligned domain in the [Pfam:PF01544] model (model_start, model_end) and [UniProt:B3J323] protein sequence (seq_start, seq_end). (B) Split domains. Annotation of [Pfam:PF01544] domains in yeast ALR2 [UniProt:P43553] and MNR2 [UniProt:P35724]. (C) Partial domains bounded by the ends of the sequence [UniProt:Q7U9V6] or other domains [UniProt:E9GP80]. (D) An unbounded partial domain in [UniProt:Q9S9N4].

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