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Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

Trancriptome for Japanese Eel

General information

URL: http://molas.iis.sinica.edu.tw/jpeel
Full name: Trancriptome for Japanese Eel
Description: An online transcriptomic database for Japanese eel which integrated the annotations from the BLAST/nr, GO, Pfam, SignalP, tmHMM, and KEGG databases. Users can find the genes that they interested in by entering keywords through “Full-text search on Annotation tables”. Uploading sequences to the “Sequence Search/BLAST” section can blast against the transcriptomic database for discovering homologous genes.
Year founded: 2015
Last update:
Version:
Accessibility:
Accessible
Country/Region: China

Contact information

University/Institution: National Taiwan University
Address: Institute of Fisheries Science, College of Life Science, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan
City: Taipei
Province/State: Taiwan
Country/Region: China
Contact name (PI/Team): Yu-San Han
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): yshan@ntu.edu.tw

Publications

26406914
De Novo Assembly of the Whole Transcriptome of the Wild Embryo, Preleptocephalus, Leptocephalus, and Glass Eel of Anguilla japonica and Deciphering the Digestive and Absorptive Capacities during Early Development. [PMID: 26406914]
Hsu HY, Chen SH, Cha YR, Tsukamoto K, Lin CY, Han YS.

Natural stocks of Japanese eel (Anguilla japonica) have decreased drastically because of overfishing, habitat destruction, and changes in the ocean environment over the past few decades. However, to date, artificial mass production of glass eels is far from reality because of the lack of appropriate feed for the eel larvae. In this study, wild glass eel, leptocephali, preleptocephali, and embryos were collected to conduct RNA-seq. Approximately 279 million reads were generated and assembled into 224,043 transcripts. The transcript levels of genes coding for digestive enzymes and nutrient transporters were investigated to estimate the capacities for nutrient digestion and absorption during early development. The results showed that the transcript levels of protein digestion enzymes were higher than those of carbohydrate and lipid digestion enzymes in the preleptocephali and leptocephali, and the transcript levels of amino acid transporters were also higher than those of glucose and fructose transporters and the cholesterol transporter. In addition, the transcript levels of glucose and fructose transporters were significantly raising in the leptocephali. Moreover, the transcript levels of protein, carbohydrate, and lipid digestion enzymes were balanced in the glass eel, but the transcript levels of amino acid transporters were higher than those of glucose and cholesterol transporters. These findings implied that preleptocephali and leptocephali prefer high-protein food, and the nutritional requirements of monosaccharides and lipids for the eel larvae vary with growth. An online database (http://molas.iis.sinica.edu.tw/jpeel/) that will provide the sequences and the annotated results of assembled transcripts was established for the eel research community.

PLoS One. 2015:10(9) | 17 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-20)

Ranking

All databases:
4503/6895 (34.706%)
Gene genome and annotation:
1372/2021 (32.162%)
Expression:
923/1347 (31.552%)
Pathway:
290/451 (35.92%)
Standard ontology and nomenclature:
164/238 (31.513%)
Metadata:
464/719 (35.605%)
4503
Total Rank
16
Citations
1.6
z-index

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Record metadata

Created on: 2018-01-28
Curated by:
Sidra Younas [2018-04-12]
Meiye Jiang [2018-01-28]