Database Commons
Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

AMPSphere

General information

URL: https://ampsphere.big-data-biology.org
Full name: antimicrobial peptides database
Description: AMPSphere is available as a web resource that displays each AMP for browsing by family, location, and samples where it was found.
Year founded: 2024
Last update: 2024
Version: 1.0
Accessibility:
Accessible
Country/Region: China

Funding support

  • 2021YFF0703703

Classification & Tag

Data type:
Data object:
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Major species:
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Contact information

University/Institution: Fudan University
Address:
City: Shanghai
Province/State: Shanghai
Country/Region: China
Contact name (PI/Team): AMPSphere Team
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): 20110850018@fudan.edu.cn

Publications

38843834
Discovery of antimicrobial peptides in the global microbiome with machine learning. [PMID: 38843834]
Santos-Júnior CD, Torres MDT, Duan Y, Rodríguez Del Río Á, Schmidt TSB, Chong H, Fullam A, Kuhn M, Zhu C, Houseman A, Somborski J, Vines A, Zhao XM, Bork P, Huerta-Cepas J, de la Fuente-Nunez C, Coelho LP.

Novel antibiotics are urgently needed to combat the antibiotic-resistance crisis. We present a machine-learning-based approach to predict antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) within the global microbiome and leverage a vast dataset of 63,410 metagenomes and 87,920 prokaryotic genomes from environmental and host-associated habitats to create the AMPSphere, a comprehensive catalog comprising 863,498 non-redundant peptides, few of which match existing databases. AMPSphere provides insights into the evolutionary origins of peptides, including by duplication or gene truncation of longer sequences, and we observed that AMP production varies by habitat. To validate our predictions, we synthesized and tested 100 AMPs against clinically relevant drug-resistant pathogens and human gut commensals both in vitro and in vivo. A total of 79 peptides were active, with 63 targeting pathogens. These active AMPs exhibited antibacterial activity by disrupting bacterial membranes. In conclusion, our approach identified nearly one million prokaryotic AMP sequences, an open-access resource for antibiotic discovery.

Cell. 2024:187(14) | 150 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-13)

Ranking

All databases:
148/6895 (97.868%)
Gene genome and annotation:
57/2021 (97.229%)
Health and medicine:
39/1738 (97.814%)
148
Total Rank
117
Citations
117
z-index

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Record metadata

Created on: 2025-03-19
Curated by:
Yiqian Duan [2025-03-25]
Lina Ma [2025-03-24]
Yiqian Duan [2025-03-19]