Database Commons
Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

General information

URL: http://pcwde.riceblast.snu.ac.kr/index.php?a=view
Full name: Plant Cell Wall-degrading Enzymes Database
Description: Fungal PCWDE Database provides identification results from sequence profiling method by HMMER3.Currently, over 300 genomes were scanned and available right here!
Year founded: 2013
Last update:
Version:
Accessibility:
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Accessible
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Country/Region: Korea, Republic of

Classification & Tag

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

Contact information

University/Institution: Seoul National University
Address:
City:
Province/State:
Country/Region: Korea, Republic of
Contact name (PI/Team): Yong-Hwan Lee
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): yonglee@snu.ac.kr

Publications

24564786
Fungal plant cell wall-degrading enzyme database: a platform for comparative and evolutionary genomics in fungi and Oomycetes. [PMID: 24564786]
Choi J, Kim KT, Jeon J, Lee YH.

BACKGROUND: Plant cell wall-degrading enzymes (PCWDEs) play significant roles throughout the fungal life including acquisition of nutrients and decomposition of plant cell walls. In addition, many of PCWDEs are also utilized by biofuel and pulp industries. In order to develop a comparative genomics platform focused in fungal PCWDEs and provide a resource for evolutionary studies, Fungal PCWDE Database (FPDB) is constructed (http://pcwde.riceblast.snu.ac.kr/).
RESULTS: In order to archive fungal PCWDEs, 22 sequence profiles were constructed and searched on 328 genomes of fungi, Oomycetes, plants and animals. A total of 6,682 putative genes encoding PCWDEs were predicted, showing differential distribution by their life styles, host ranges and taxonomy. Genes known to be involved in fungal pathogenicity, including polygalacturonase (PG) and pectin lyase, were enriched in plant pathogens. Furthermore, crop pathogens had more PCWDEs than those of rot fungi, implying that the PCWDEs analysed in this study are more needed for invading plant hosts than wood-decaying processes. Evolutionary analysis of PGs in 34 selected genomes revealed that gene duplication and loss events were mainly driven by taxonomic divergence and partly contributed by those events in species-level, especially in plant pathogens.
CONCLUSIONS: The FPDB would provide a fungi-specialized genomics platform, a resource for evolutionary studies of PCWDE gene families and extended analysis option by implementing Favorite, which is a data exchange and analysis hub built in Comparative Fungal Genomics Platform (CFGP 2.0; http://cfgp.snu.ac.kr/).

BMC Genomics. 2013:14 Suppl 5() | 30 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2024-04-20)

Ranking

All databases:
2649/6000 (55.867%)
Pathway:
171/389 (56.298%)
2649
Total Rank
30
Citations
2.727
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Record metadata

Created on: 2018-01-28
Curated by:
Fatima Batool [2018-08-07]
Zhuang Xiong [2018-02-24]
Zhaohua Li [2018-01-28]