Converting ChEMBL to sequence

This page gives you access to a subset of ChEMBL that has been converted to Protein Line Notation. A total of 27142 structures out of 39123 "peptide-like" structures have been successfully converted. More details on the conversion process can be found beneath the structure table.



ChEMBL ID contains
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20 randomly selected converted structures

ChEMBL IDChEMBL structureConverted sequence imageProteax PLN (Protein Line Notation)
CHEMBL505995H-TPRERRRKARG-[NH2] name=CHEMBL505995
CHEMBL1782867H-{d}[Res_1071]SFW-OH name=CHEMBL1782867
CHEMBL1372737H-[Res_1700]V[Res_1786]-[CTerm_1096] name=CHEMBL1372737
CHEMBL2316445[NTerm_820]-VF[Res_2861]-[CTerm_828] name=CHEMBL2316445
CHEMBL3105700H-YE{d}LLHGAGNHAAGILTL-[NH2] name=CHEMBL3105700
CHEMBL170683[NTerm_700]-VPF-[CTerm_57] name=CHEMBL170683
CHEMBL2063169(cyclo)-I{d}[Res_733]I{d}[Res_733]-(cyclo) name=CHEMBL2063169
CHEMBL178002[NTerm_887]-VA[Nle]-[CTerm_659] name=CHEMBL178002
CHEMBL2371030H-FL[Res_1732][Res_1732]V-OH name=CHEMBL2371030
CHEMBL576914H-HAEGTFTSD[Res_272][Res_1531]-[NH2] name=CHEMBL576914
CHEMBL2314136[NTerm_458]-SGW-OH name=CHEMBL2314136
CHEMBL1170412[NTerm_700]-[Res_1354][Res_2119][Nva]-[CTerm_932] name=CHEMBL1170412
CHEMBL408025H-FVPTNPGSEAF-OH name=CHEMBL408025
CHEMBL3127147[NTerm_1215]-YPWF-[NH2] name=CHEMBL3127147
CHEMBL524335H-KWRRWKRWW-OH name=CHEMBL524335
CHEMBL104564[NTerm_747]-{d}QG[Res_1590]-[CTerm_810] name=CHEMBL104564
CHEMBL181826H-[Res_671]VL-[CTerm_428] name=CHEMBL181826
CHEMBL1631555H-RFFRFFRFF-[CTerm_184] name=CHEMBL1631555
CHEMBL264775H-RPK{d}PQQFFGLM-[NH2] name=CHEMBL264775
CHEMBL505549H-WRWRWWKRW-OH name=CHEMBL505549

Conversion process

All structures in the ChEMBL 19 database were downloaded as an SD file and, with the help of KNIME, probable "peptide-like" structures were identified. The "peptide-like" structures were defined as those containing a substructure of three connected glysines. This yielded a "peptide-like" subset of 39123 structures.

The peptide subset was loaded into a PostgreSQL database table and the Biochemfusion Proteax cartridge was used to convert structures, when possible, to sequences. The first conversion took 87 seconds and produced 27142 converted sequences.

You can download the full set of produced sequences (TAB-separated file with ChEMBL ID + PLN, ~11MB).

All found unknown residues and terminal structures were embedded as inline structures in the first round of produced PLN. The embedded structures were then de-duplicated and extracted. You can download the structure sets in gzip-ed SD file format from here:

143 of the unknown residue structures have been assigned well-defined names by NextMove Software's great Sugar & Splice tool (press the "Biologics" button). Many thanks to Roger Sayle at NextMove Software for processing this subset of residues with Sugar & Splice.

NextMove's residue names can be applied to a Proteax modification database (where the above SD files have been imported) by the following SQL script:

The currently produced PLN has been generated after all the above data has been loaded into Proteax's database of known structures. As you will see, most of the non-natural residues and terminals have auto-generated names based on sequential numbers.