ENDscript 2 is a friendly Web server for extracting and rendering a comprehensive
analysis of primary to quaternary protein structure information in an automated
way. This major upgrade has been fully re-engineered to enhance speed, accuracy
and usability with interactive 3D visualization. It takes advantage of the new
version 3 of ESPript, our well-known sequence alignment renderer, improved to
handle a large number of data with reduced computation time. From a single PDB
entry or file, ENDscript produces high quality figures displaying multiple
sequence alignment of proteins homologous to the query, colored according to
residue conservation. Furthermore, the experimental secondary structure elements
and a detailed set of relevant biophysical and structural data are depicted. All
this information and more are now mapped on interactive 3D PyMOL
representations. Thanks to its adaptive and rigorous algorithm, beginner to
expert users can modify settings to fine-tune ENDscript to their needs.
ENDscript has also been upgraded as an open platform for the visualization of
multiple biochemical and structural data coming from external biotool Web
servers, with both 2D and 3D representations. ENDscript 2 and ESPript 3 are
freely available at http://endscript.ibcp.fr
and http://espript.ibcp.fr, respectively.
ESPript can be accessed on its Web site at http://www.ipbs.fr/ESPript. Sources and helpfiles can be downloaded via anonymous ftp from ftp.ipbs.fr. A tar file is held in the directory pub/ESPript.
The fortran program ESPript was created in 1993, to display on a PostScript figure multiple sequence alignments adorned with secondary structure elements. A web server was made available in 1999 and ESPript has been linked to three major web tools: ProDom which identifies protein domains, PredictProtein which predicts secondary structure elements and NPS@ which runs sequence alignment programs. A web server named ENDscript was created in 2002 to facilitate the generation of ESPript figures containing a large amount of information. ENDscript uses programs such as BLAST, Clustal and PHYLODENDRON to work on protein sequences and such as DSSP, CNS and MOLSCRIPT to work on protein coordinates. It enables the creation, from a single Protein Data Bank identifier, of a multiple sequence alignment figure adorned with secondary structure elements of each sequence of known 3D structure. Similar 3D structures are superimposed in turn with the program PROFIT and a final figure is drawn with BOBSCRIPT, which shows sequence and structure conservation along the Calpha trace of the query. ESPript and ENDscript are available at http://genopole.toulouse.inra.fr/ESPript.
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