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The Final, Published, Version of The Phage Proteome Tree The Interactive Phage Proteome Taxonomy Tree How each of the trees was made Complete description of all the phage, taxonomy, and so on. All the treefiles that were generated during the course of this work. |
The work on these pages has been prepared by Rob Edwards and Forest Rohwer Latest build - Feb. 11th, 2003 The latest build of the phage proteomic tree contains 144 phage genomes. Here is a treefile that describes these relationships. You will need a treeviewing program to view this treefile. The tree shown as the background to this page is the latest tree that we have constructed. View the Final version in a separate window We have developed an interactive tree that allows you to find out what predicted proteins genomes have in common. In other words, what makes a tree a tree. Find out more at the Interactive tree. We have a complete description of how each of the trees was made. There is a description of each of the phage, hyperlinked to papers, ICTV taxonomy, etc, so that you can investigate the relationships between the phage Many trees were constructed during the evolution of this work. You can investigate these trees, figure out what makes us tick, and view a lot of information comparing phage genomes from the All Treefiles page. All the trees were constructed from the complete phage genomes available from the NCBI collection. This collection lists 105 phage genomes. You can retrieve protein or DNA sequences, annotations etc from our online interactive version of the database. Original phage taxonomy is authorized by the The International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV). The annotations used on these pages are in part derived from the ICTV system. |