Thursday 9 June 2016

A new InterPro member database

CDD joins InterPro

We are pleased to announce that the NCBI Conserved Domain Database (CDD) has joined the InterPro consortium as a member database, and has begun to be integrated into the resource.  This is the first new member database to be integrated into InterPro since HAMAP was included, back in 2009.  As you can see, it has been 7 years since a new database has been added, and this is a first for the current InterPro team.

While there are some similarities between CDD and InterPro, with both resource aggregating data from Pfam, TIGRFAMs and SMART, CDD also utilises COGs and PRKs, whereas InterPro incorporates eight other resources.  Unlike InterPro, the CDD team also curate their own models, using position specific scoring matrixes (PSSMs) to represent protein domains, and it is these models that have been prioritised for integration into InterPro.

What does CDD bring?

This release contains all 11,273 CDD models, with 318 already integrated into InterPro.  It will take time for the rest of the entries to be curated into the InterPro hierarchy, ensuring that we are consistent with both CDD’s and our own relationship trees, as well as assigning GO terms for InterPro2GO. The NCBI models are often functionally specific, with multiple CDD entries covering the same sequence set as a single Pfam profile hidden Markov model (HMM), for example.

Having such algorithmic and database diversity helps capture as much knowledge as possible about the function of a protein.  CDD uses a derivative of RPS-BLAST that performs the appropriate assignment of proteins to database entries. This software, rpsbproc (also known as CD-search), has been incorporated into the latest version of InterProScan, making CDD accessible via our web services too.


Figure 1. InterProScan result for UniProt protein A0AM81. CDD entry cd00770 extends coverage of the protein and adds more functionally specific information about the C-terminal aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase domain (in this case, that it is a serine-tRNA ligase domain).

What Next?

With summer fast approaching, we have our typical break from database releases, with the next InterPro release not anticipated until the beginning of September.  In the meantime, we have a number of planned infrastructural changes that will broaden the scope of InterPro further... We will describe these changes in detail once they are ready!

Rob Finn
on behalf of the InterPro team