Glycome

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Glycome


This page is a placeholder, or under current development; it is here principally to establish the logical framework of the site. The material on this page is correct, but incomplete.


The machinery that gives rise to the varied post-translational modifications of proteins with branched oligosaccharides has given rise to a combinatorial code that plays important roles in localization and sorting, and cellular communication. Glycobiology studies the enzymes, reactions and products involved, glycomics establishes the cross-sectional view of the entire complement of a cell's glycosylations, their dynamic change, and what general functional roles could be associated with such change.



 

Introductory reading

Ranzinger et al. (2011) GlycomeDB--a unified database for carbohydrate structures. Nucleic Acids Res 39:D373-6. (pmid: 21045056)

PubMed ] [ DOI ]


 

Contents

  • Representation of oligoglycoside sequence and topology
  • Databases
  • Workflow

   

Further reading and resources

Hashimoto et al. (2006) KEGG as a glycome informatics resource. Glycobiology 16:63R-70R. (pmid: 16014746)

PubMed ] [ DOI ]

Herget et al. (2008) GlycoCT-a unifying sequence format for carbohydrates. Carbohydr Res 343:2162-71. (pmid: 18436199)

PubMed ] [ DOI ]

Lütteke & von der Lieth (2009) Data mining the PDB for glyco-related data. Methods Mol Biol 534:293-310. (pmid: 19277543)

PubMed ] [ DOI ]

von der Lieth et al. (2011) EUROCarbDB: An open-access platform for glycoinformatics. Glycobiology 21:493-502. (pmid: 21106561)

PubMed ] [ DOI ]