Database Commons
Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

OrthoMaM

General information

URL: http://www.orthomam.univ-montp2.fr
Full name: Database of orthologous mammalian markers
Description: Molecular data play a key role in phylogenetic and molecular evolution inferences. Mammalian genomics and systematics provides us with a clear example, with several open evolutionary questions now able to be answered. However, molecular studies have until present used only a handful of standard markers and have not attempted to utilise the information contained within the increasingly large pool of mammalian genome sequences. The identification and utilisation of potentially new informative markers from this comparative genomics pool can help to further resolve the mammalian phylogenetic tree, and better understand the evolutionary dynamics of genes.
Year founded: 2007
Last update: April 2015
Version: 9
Accessibility:
Accessible
Country/Region: France

Classification & Tag

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

Contact information

University/Institution: University Montpellier 2
Address: Institute of Evolution Sciences of Montpellier (ISE-M), UMR 5554 CNRS IRD, University Montpellier 2, Montpellier, France
City:
Province/State:
Country/Region: France
Contact name (PI/Team): Emmanuel J. P. Douzery
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): emmanuel.douzery@univ-montp2.fr.

Publications

24723423
OrthoMaM v8: a database of orthologous exons and coding sequences for comparative genomics in mammals. [PMID: 24723423]
Douzery EJ, Scornavacca C, Romiguier J, Belkhir K, Galtier N, Delsuc F, Ranwez V.

Comparative genomic studies extensively rely on alignments of orthologous sequences. Yet, selecting, gathering, and aligning orthologous exons and protein-coding sequences (CDS) that are relevant for a given evolutionary analysis can be a difficult and time-consuming task. In this context, we developed OrthoMaM, a database of ORTHOlogous MAmmalian Markers describing the evolutionary dynamics of orthologous genes in mammalian genomes using a phylogenetic framework. Since its first release in 2007, OrthoMaM has regularly evolved, not only to include newly available genomes but also to incorporate up-to-date software in its analytic pipeline. This eighth release integrates the 40 complete mammalian genomes available in Ensembl v73 and provides alignments, phylogenies, evolutionary descriptor information, and functional annotations for 13,404 single-copy orthologous CDS and 6,953 long exons. The graphical interface allows to easily explore OrthoMaM to identify markers with specific characteristics (e.g., taxa availability, alignment size, %G+C, evolutionary rate, chromosome location). It hence provides an efficient solution to sample preprocessed markers adapted to user-specific needs. OrthoMaM has proven to be a valuable resource for researchers interested in mammalian phylogenomics, evolutionary genomics, and has served as a source of benchmark empirical data sets in several methodological studies. OrthoMaM is available for browsing, query and complete or filtered downloads at http://www.orthomam.univ-montp2.fr/.

Mol Biol Evol. 2014:31(7) | 64 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-20)
18053139
OrthoMaM: a database of orthologous genomic markers for placental mammal phylogenetics. [PMID: 18053139]
Ranwez V, Delsuc F, Ranwez S, Belkhir K, Tilak MK, Douzery EJ.

BACKGROUND: Molecular sequence data have become the standard in modern day phylogenetics. In particular, several long-standing questions of mammalian evolutionary history have been recently resolved thanks to the use of molecular characters. Yet, most studies have focused on only a handful of standard markers. The availability of an ever increasing number of whole genome sequences is a golden mine for modern systematics. Genomic data now provide the opportunity to select new markers that are potentially relevant for further resolving branches of the mammalian phylogenetic tree at various taxonomic levels.
DESCRIPTION: The EnsEMBL database was used to determine a set of orthologous genes from 12 available complete mammalian genomes. As targets for possible amplification and sequencing in additional taxa, more than 3,000 exons of length > 400 bp have been selected, among which 118, 368, 608, and 674 are respectively retrieved for 12, 11, 10, and 9 species. A bioinformatic pipeline has been developed to provide evolutionary descriptors for these candidate markers in order to assess their potential phylogenetic utility. The resulting OrthoMaM (Orthologous Mammalian Markers) database can be queried and alignments can be downloaded through a dedicated web interface http://kimura.univ-montp2.fr/orthomam.
CONCLUSION: The importance of marker choice in phylogenetic studies has long been stressed. Our database centered on complete genome information now makes possible to select promising markers to a given phylogenetic question or a systematic framework by querying a number of evolutionary descriptors. The usefulness of the database is illustrated with two biological examples. First, two potentially useful markers were identified for rodent systematics based on relevant evolutionary parameters and sequenced in additional species. Second, a complete, gapless 94 kb supermatrix of 118 orthologous exons was assembled for 12 mammals. Phylogenetic analyses using probabilistic methods unambiguously supported the new placental phylogeny by retrieving the monophyly of Glires, Euarchontoglires, Laurasiatheria, and Boreoeutheria. Muroid rodents thus do not represent a basal placental lineage as it was mistakenly reasserted in some recent phylogenomic analyses based on fewer taxa. We expect the OrthoMaM database to be useful for further resolving the phylogenetic tree of placental mammals and for better understanding the evolutionary dynamics of their genomes, i.e., the forces that shaped coding sequences in terms of selective constraints.

BMC Evol Biol. 2007:7() | 99 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-20)

Ranking

All databases:
1593/6895 (76.911%)
Phylogeny and homology:
73/302 (76.159%)
1593
Total Rank
155
Citations
8.611
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Record metadata

Created on: 2018-01-27
Curated by:
huma shireen [2018-08-27]
Syed Sardar [2018-04-08]
Qi Wang [2018-01-27]