NAME¶
theseus_align - quick-and-dirty way to superimpose proteins
SYNOPSIS¶
theseus_align [
theseus options] -f 
pdbfile1.pdb
  pdbfile2.pdb ...
OPTIONS¶
The options given to the script will be passed on to 
theseus. For a
  complete description, see the man page for 
theseus (1).
DESCRIPTION¶
This manual page briefly documents briefly the script 
theseus_align,
  designed for a quick-and-dirty way to ML superposition proteins with different
  sequences. It should work very well when the protein sequences are relatively
  similar, although the ML method will still give much better results than
  least-squares when the sequences are moderately divergent. Technically, this
  procedure gives a structure-based superposition of a sequence-based alignment.
  It 
does not perform a structure-based alignment.
First, the script uses 
theseus to create FASTA formatted sequence files
  corresponding to the exact protein sequences found in the pdb files that you
  supply.
Second, these sequences are aligned using the multiple sequence alignment
  program of your choice. The script can easily be modified for CLUSTALW,
  T_COFFEE, KALIGN, DIALIGN2, or MAFFT. Any multiple sequence alignment program
  can be used, as long as it can generate clustal-formatted files. However, I
  highly recommend Bob Edgar's MUSCLE program for both its speed and accuracy.
  (For more info see 
http://www.drive5.com/muscle/ .)
Third, 
theseus performs a superposition of the structures using the
  sequence alignment as a guide.
The installed version of 
theseus_align uses 
muscle (1) for doing
  the multiple sequence alignment. If you wish to use one of the other programs
  mentioned above, you'll have to copy the script to your own directory and edit
  it.
SEE ALSO¶
theseus (1), 
muscle (1), 
clustalw (1), 
t_coffee (1),
  
kalign (1), 
dialign2 (1), 
mafft (1). All of these
  programs can be installed on Debian or Ubuntu systems using 
apt-get
  (8).
 
AUTHOR¶
theseus_align was written by Douglas L. Theobald, Department of
  Biochemistry, Brandeis University.