Database Commons
Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

P3DB

General information

URL: http://p3db.org/
Full name: Plant Protein Phosphorylation DataBase
Description: The Plant Protein Phosphorylation Database provides a resource of protein phosphorylation data from multiple plants. There are altogether 47,923 phosphosites in 16,477 phosphoproteins curated across nine plant organisms from 32 studies. P(3)DB incorporates multiple network viewers for the above features and reflects a community-based design through which users can share datasets and automate data depository processes for publication purposes.
Year founded: 2009
Last update: 2013-08-05
Version: v3.0
Accessibility:
Accessible
Country/Region: United States

Classification & Tag

Data type:
Data object:
Database category:
Major species:
Keywords:

Contact information

University/Institution: University of Missouri
Address: Columbia, Missouri 65211, USA
City: Columbia
Province/State: Missouri
Country/Region: United States
Contact name (PI/Team): Jay Thelen
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): thelenj@missouri.edu

Publications

28150236
Bioinformatics Analysis of Protein Phosphorylation in Plant Systems Biology Using P3DB. [PMID: 28150236]
Yao Q, Xu D.

Protein phosphorylation is one of the most pervasive protein post-translational modification events in plant cells. It is involved in many plant biological processes, such as plant growth, organ development, and plant immunology, by regulating or switching signaling and metabolic pathways. High-throughput experimental methods like mass spectrometry can easily characterize hundreds to thousands of phosphorylation events in a single experiment. With the increasing volume of the data sets, Plant Protein Phosphorylation DataBase (P3DB, http://p3db.org ) provides a comprehensive, systematic, and interactive online platform to deposit, query, analyze, and visualize these phosphorylation events in many plant species. It stores the protein phosphorylation sites in the context of identified mass spectra, phosphopeptides, and phosphoproteins contributed from various plant proteome studies. In addition, P3DB associates these plant phosphorylation sites to protein physicochemical information in the protein charts and tertiary structures, while various protein annotations from hierarchical kinase phosphatase families, protein domains, and gene ontology are also added into the database. P3DB not only provides rich information, but also interconnects and provides visualization of the data in networks, in systems biology context. Currently, P3DB includes the KiC (Kinase Client) assay network, the protein-protein interaction network, the kinase-substrate network, the phosphatase-substrate network, and the protein domain co-occurrence network. All of these are available to query for and visualize existing phosphorylation events. Although P3DB only hosts experimentally identified phosphorylation data, it provides a plant phosphorylation prediction model for any unknown queries on the fly. P3DB is an entry point to the plant phosphorylation community to deposit and visualize any customized data sets within this systems biology framework. Nowadays, P3DB has become one of the major bioinformatics platforms of protein phosphorylation in plant biology.

Methods Mol Biol. 2017:1558() | 9 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-13)
24243849
P³DB 3.0: From plant phosphorylation sites to protein networks. [PMID: 24243849]
Yao Q, Ge H, Wu S, Zhang N, Chen W, Xu C, Gao J, Thelen JJ, Xu D.

In the past few years, the Plant Protein Phosphorylation Database (P(3)DB, http://p3db.org) has become one of the most significant in vivo data resources for studying plant phosphoproteomics. We have substantially updated P(3)DB with respect to format, new datasets and analytic tools. In the P(3)DB 3.0, there are altogether 47 923 phosphosites in 16 477 phosphoproteins curated across nine plant organisms from 32 studies, which have met our multiple quality standards for acquisition of in vivo phosphorylation site data. Centralized by these phosphorylation data, multiple related data and annotations are provided, including protein-protein interaction (PPI), gene ontology, protein tertiary structures, orthologous sequences, kinase/phosphatase classification and Kinase Client Assay (KiC Assay) data--all of which provides context for the phosphorylation event. In addition, P(3)DB 3.0 incorporates multiple network viewers for the above features, such as PPI network, kinase-substrate network, phosphatase-substrate network, and domain co-occurrence network to help study phosphorylation from a systems point of view. Furthermore, the new P(3)DB reflects a community-based design through which users can share datasets and automate data depository processes for publication purposes. Each of these new features supports the goal of making P(3)DB a comprehensive, systematic and interactive platform for phosphoproteomics research.

Nucleic Acids Res. 2014:42(Database issue) | 63 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-13)
22973285
P(3)DB: An Integrated Database for Plant Protein Phosphorylation. [PMID: 22973285]
Yao Q, Bollinger C, Gao J, Xu D, Thelen JJ.

Protein phosphorylation is widely recognized as the most widespread, enzyme-catalyzed post-translational modification in eukaryotes. In particular, plants have appropriated this signaling mechanism as evidenced by the twofold higher frequency of protein kinases within the genome compared to other eukaryotes. While all aspects of plant protein phosphorylation research have grown in the past 10â??years; phosphorylation site mapping using high-resolution mass spectrometry has grown exponentially. In Arabidopsis alone there are thousands of experimentally determined phosphorylation sites. To archive these events in a user-intuitive format we have developed P(3)DB, the Plant Protein Phosphorylation Database (p3db.org). This database is a repository for plant protein phosphorylation site data, currently hosting information on 32,963 non-redundant sites collated from 23 experimental studies from six plant species. These data can be queried for a protein-of-interest using an integrated BLAST module to query similar sequences with known phosphorylation sites among the multiple plants currently investigated. The paper demonstrates how this resource can help identify functionally conserved phosphorylation sites in plants using a multi-system approach.

Front Plant Sci. 2012:3() | 44 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-13)
18931372
P3DB: a plant protein phosphorylation database. [PMID: 18931372]
Gao J, Agrawal GK, Thelen JJ, Xu D.

P(3)DB (http://www.p3db.org/) provides a resource of protein phosphorylation data from multiple plants. The database was initially constructed with a dataset from oilseed rape, including 14,670 nonredundant phosphorylation sites from 6382 substrate proteins, representing the largest collection of plant phosphorylation data to date. Additional protein phosphorylation data are being deposited into this database from large-scale studies of Arabidopsis thaliana and soybean. Phosphorylation data from current literature are also being integrated into the P(3)DB. With a web-based user interface, the database is browsable, downloadable and searchable by protein accession number, description and sequence. A BLAST utility was integrated and a phosphopeptide BLAST browser was implemented to allow users to query the database for phosphopeptides similar to protein sequences of their interest. With the large-scale phosphorylation data and associated web-based tools, P(3)DB will be a valuable resource for both plant and nonplant biologists in the field of protein phosphorylation.

Nucleic Acids Res. 2009:37(Database issue) | 84 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-13)

Ranking

All databases:
1208/6895 (82.495%)
Interaction:
242/1194 (79.816%)
1208
Total Rank
190
Citations
11.875
z-index

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Record metadata

Created on: 2015-06-20
Curated by:
Shixiang Sun [2016-03-24]
Zhang Zhang [2016-01-13]
Zhang Zhang [2015-12-28]
Shixiang Sun [2015-11-19]
Shixiang Sun [2015-06-28]
Shixiang Sun [2015-06-26]