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Geoffrey J. Barton

University of Dundee

ORCID: 0000-0002-9014-5355

Publishes on Genomics and Phylogenetic Studies, Protein Structure and Dynamics, Enzyme Structure and Function. 368 papers and 38.5k citations.

368Publications
38.5kTotal Citations
#5in Base Editing

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Top publicationsby citations

Jalview Version 2—a multiple sequence alignment editor and analysis workbench
Andrew Waterhouse, James B Procter, David Martin et al.|Bioinformatics|2009
Cited by 10.8kOpen Access

UNLABELLED: Jalview Version 2 is a system for interactive WYSIWYG editing, analysis and annotation of multiple sequence alignments. Core features include keyboard and mouse-based editing, multiple views and alignment overviews, and linked structure display with Jmol. Jalview 2 is available in two forms: a lightweight Java applet for use in web applications, and a powerful desktop application that employs web services for sequence alignment, secondary structure prediction and the retrieval of alignments, sequences, annotation and structures from public databases and any DAS 1.53 compliant sequence or annotation server. AVAILABILITY: The Jalview 2 Desktop application and JalviewLite applet are made freely available under the GPL, and can be downloaded from www.jalview.org.

JPred4: a protein secondary structure prediction server
Alexey Drozdetskiy, Christian Cole, James B Procter et al.|Nucleic Acids Research|2015
Cited by 1.9kOpen Access

JPred4 (http://www.compbio.dundee.ac.uk/jpred4) is the latest version of the popular JPred protein secondary structure prediction server which provides predictions by the JNet algorithm, one of the most accurate methods for secondary structure prediction. In addition to protein secondary structure, JPred also makes predictions of solvent accessibility and coiled-coil regions. The JPred service runs up to 94 000 jobs per month and has carried out over 1.5 million predictions in total for users in 179 countries. The JPred4 web server has been re-implemented in the Bootstrap framework and JavaScript to improve its design, usability and accessibility from mobile devices. JPred4 features higher accuracy, with a blind three-state (α-helix, β-strand and coil) secondary structure prediction accuracy of 82.0% while solvent accessibility prediction accuracy has been raised to 90% for residues <5% accessible. Reporting of results is enhanced both on the website and through the optional email summaries and batch submission results. Predictions are now presented in SVG format with options to view full multiple sequence alignments with and without gaps and insertions. Finally, the help-pages have been updated and tool-tips added as well as step-by-step tutorials.

The Jalview Java alignment editor
Michèle Clamp, James Cuff, Stephen M. J. Searle et al.|Bioinformatics|2004
Cited by 1.7kOpen Access

Abstract Summary: Multiple sequence alignment remains a crucial method for understanding the function of groups of related nucleic acid and protein sequences. However, it is known that automatic multiple sequence alignments can often be improved by manual editing. Therefore, tools are needed to view and edit multiple sequence alignments. Due to growth in the sequence databases, multiple sequence alignments can often be large and difficult to view efficiently. The Jalview Java alignment editor is presented here, which enables fast viewing and editing of large multiple sequence alignments. Availability: The Jar file and source code for Jalview is freely available via the World Wide Web at http://www.jalview.org. A Jalview mailing list is also available by e-mailing majordomo@sanger.ac.uk with subscribe Jalview in the body of the mail.

The Jpred 3 secondary structure prediction server
Cited by 1.4kOpen Access

Jpred (http://www.compbio.dundee.ac.uk/jpred) is a secondary structure prediction server powered by the Jnet algorithm. Jpred performs over 1000 predictions per week for users in more than 50 countries. The recently updated Jnet algorithm provides a three-state (alpha-helix, beta-strand and coil) prediction of secondary structure at an accuracy of 81.5%. Given either a single protein sequence or a multiple sequence alignment, Jpred derives alignment profiles from which predictions of secondary structure and solvent accessibility are made. The predictions are presented as coloured HTML, plain text, PostScript, PDF and via the Jalview alignment editor to allow flexibility in viewing and applying the data. The new Jpred 3 server includes significant usability improvements that include clearer feedback of the progress or failure of submitted requests. Functional improvements include batch submission of sequences, summary results via email and updates to the search databases. A new software pipeline will enable Jnet/Jpred to continue to be updated in sync with major updates to SCOP and UniProt and so ensures that Jpred 3 will maintain high-accuracy predictions.

ALSCRIPT: a tool to format multiple sequence alignments
Geoffrey J. Barton|Protein Engineering Design and Selection|1993
Cited by 1.1kOpen Access

The ALSCRIPT program described in this article was developed specifically to allow the easy formatting and graphical display of large multiple alignments. Although written originally for the author's use, the interface is relatively friendly, and should be easy to learn by anyone familiar with plotting graphs

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