Figure 1.
Distribution of number of Pfam domains and domain architectures found for selected species.
Figure 2.
Distribution of protein domains (A) and domain architectures (B) exclusively found in the different fungal subphyla.
Figure 3.
Distribution of Pfam domains and domain architectures per genus.
In parenthesis, the number of species and the number of strains that belong to a given genus are indicated. The area occupied by each genus corresponds to the number of exclusive domain architectures, whereas the colour correlates with the number of exclusive domains present among those architectures (calculated as the number of domains divided by number of domain architectures).
Table 1.
List of genera including more than one species.
Table 2.
Protein domains most frequently found among the 25 top-ranked most promiscuous domains in all the fungal organisms.
Figure 4.
Distribution of protein domains (A), domain architectures (B) and Pfam clans (C) shared between the fungal species included in this study and Homo sapiens.
The category “fungi” refers to the set of 137 organisms analysed.
Table 3.
Pathways and protein domain architectures related to fungal promiscuous domains. The promiscuous domains are indicated in bold letters.
Table 4.
Protein domains found exclusively in proteins from the Groups 3 and 4 of clinical isolates.