EMBOSS does not allow database entries to be specified by just the ID name or accession number. You must specify both the name of the database and the entry, for example 'embl:hsfau', not just 'hsfau'.
If you do not know which database(s) contain the entry you are interested in, whichdb will tell you.
whichdb can also, optionally, write out the sequences it finds to files.
Why are there two such identifiers? The ID name was originally intended to be a human-readable name that had some indication of the function of its sequence. In EMBL and GenBank the first two (or three) letters indicated the species and the rest indicated the function, for example 'hsfau' is the 'Homo Sapiens FAU pseudogene'. This naming scheme started to be a problem when the number of entries added each day was so vast that people could not make up the ID names fast enough. Instead, the Accession numbers were used as the ID name. Therefore you will now find ID names like 'AF061303', the same as the Accession number for that sequence in EMBL.
ID names are not guaranteed to remain the same between different versions of a database (although in practice they usually do).
Accession numbers are unique alphanumeric identifiers that are guaranteed to remain with that sequence through the rest of the life of the database. If two sequences are merged into one, then the new sequence will get a new Accession number and the Accession numbers of the merged sequences will be retained as 'secondary' Accession numbers.
EMBL, GenBank and SwissProt share an Accession numbering scheme - an Accession number uniquely identifies a sequence within these three databases.
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The reported database entries are written out to the specified output file.
Each database that is defined in the local implementation of EMBOSS which contains an entry called 'hsfau' is reported.
Note that where a database is defined under several names ('embl', 'em'), each definition of that database containing the entry is reported.
When the '-get' option is used to output the sequences, they are written to separate files. The sequence format they are written in is always 'Fasta' format. The normal command-line qualifiers for changing the output formats etc. will not work in this program.
The names of the files that the sequences are written to is reported as they are written, for example:
Writing hsfau.embl Writing hsfau.human Writing hsfau.tembl Writing hsfau.em Writing hsfau.genbank Writing hsfau.gb |