Database Commons
Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

PolyQ

General information

URL: http://lightning.med.monash.edu/polyq2/
Full name: Polyglutamine
Description: The polyQ database provides a tool to compare the polyQ repeat location, the occurrence/type of domains and the number of domain repeats present across disease and non-disease proteins.
Year founded: 2011
Last update: 2016-03-15
Version: v2.0
Accessibility:
Accessible
Country/Region: Australia

Classification & Tag

Data type:
Data object:
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Contact information

University/Institution: Monash University
Address: Wellington Road
City: Clayton
Province/State: Victoria
Country/Region: Australia
Contact name (PI/Team): Ashley Buckle
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): ashley.buckle@monash.edu

Publications

26980520
PolyQ 2.0: an improved version of PolyQ, a database of human polyglutamine proteins. [PMID: 26980520]
Li C, Nagel J, Androulakis S, Song J, Buckle AM.

Proteins with expanded polyglutamine (polyQ) repeats are involved in human neurodegenerative diseases, via a gain-of-function mechanism of neuronal toxicity involving protein conformational changes that result in the formation and deposition of ?-sheet-rich aggregates. Aggregation is dependent on the context and properties of the host protein, such as domain context and location of the repeat tract. In order to explore this relationship in greater detail, here we describe PolyQ 2.0, an updated database that provides a comprehensive knowledgebase for human polyQ proteins. Compared with the previous PolyQ database, our new database provides a variety of substantial updates including detailed biological annotations and search options. Biological annotations in terms of domain context information, protein structural and functional annotation, single point mutations, predicted disordered regions, protein-protein interaction partners, metabolic/signaling pathways, post-translational modification sites and evolutionary information are made available. Several new database functionalities have also been provided, including search using multiple/combinatory keywords, and submission of new data entries. Also, several third-party plug-ins are employed to enhance data visualization in PolyQ 2.0. In PolyQ 2.0 the proteins are reclassified into 3 new categories and contain 9 reviewed disease-associated polyQ proteins, 105 reviewed non-disease polyQ proteins and 146 un-reviewed polyQ proteins (reviewed by UniProt curators). We envisage that this updated database will be a useful resource for functional and structural investigation of human polyQ proteins. Database URL: http://lightning.med.monash.edu/polyq2/. © The Author(s) 2016. Published by Oxford University Press.

Database (Oxford). 2016:2016() | 2 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-20)
21059684
PolyQ: a database describing the sequence and domain context of polyglutamine repeats in proteins. [PMID: 21059684]
Robertson AL, Bate MA, Androulakis SG, Bottomley SP, Buckle AM.

The polyglutamine diseases are caused in part by a gain-of-function mechanism of neuronal toxicity involving protein conformational changes that result in the formation and deposition of ?-sheet rich aggregates. Recent evidence suggests that the misfolding mechanism is context-dependent, and that properties of the host protein, including the domain architecture and location of the repeat tract, can modulate aggregation. In order to allow the bioinformatic investigation of the context of polyglutamines, we have constructed a database, PolyQ (http://pxgrid.med.monash.edu.au/polyq). We have collected the sequences of all human proteins containing runs of seven or more glutamine residues and annotated their sequences with domain information. PolyQ can be interrogated such that the sequence context of polyglutamine repeats in disease and non-disease associated proteins can be investigated.

Nucleic Acids Res. 2011:39(Database issue) | 18 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-20)

Ranking

All databases:
4677/6895 (32.183%)
Health and medicine:
1187/1738 (31.761%)
4677
Total Rank
20
Citations
1.429
z-index

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Record metadata

Created on: 2015-06-20
Curated by:
Shixiang Sun [2017-03-06]
Shixiang Sun [2016-03-25]
Shixiang Sun [2015-11-21]
Shixiang Sun [2015-06-28]
Shixiang Sun [2015-06-26]