Papers

Peer-reviewed
2014

TRNADB-CE: TRNA gene database well-timed in the era of big sequence data

Frontiers in Genetics
  • Takashi Abe
  • ,
  • Hachiro Inokuchi
  • ,
  • Yuko Yamada
  • ,
  • Akira Muto
  • ,
  • Yuki Iwasaki
  • ,
  • Toshimichi Ikemura

Volume
5
Number
MAY
First page
114
Last page
Language
English
Publishing type
Research paper (scientific journal)
DOI
10.3389/fgene.2014.00114
Publisher
Frontiers Research Foundation

The tRNA gene data base curated by experts "tRNADB-CE" (http://trna.ie.niigata-u.ac.jp) was constructed by analyzing 1,966 complete and 5,272 draft genomes of prokaryotes, 171 viruses', 121 chloroplasts', and 12 eukaryotes' genomes plus fragment sequences obtained by metagenome studies of environmental samples. 595,115 tRNA genes in total, and thus two times of genes compiled previously, have been registered, for which sequence, clover-leaf structure, and results of sequence-similarity and oligonucleotide-pattern searches can be browsed. To provide collective knowledge with help from experts in tRNA researches, we added a column for enregistering comments to each tRNA. By grouping bacterial tRNAs with an identical sequence, we have found high phylogenetic preservation of tRNA sequences, especially at the phylum level. Since many species-unknown tRNAs from metagenomic sequences have sequences identical to those found in species-known prokaryotes, the identical sequence group (ISG) can provide phylogenetic markers to investigate the microbial community in an environmental ecosystem. This strategy can be applied to a huge amount of short sequences obtained from next-generation sequencers, as showing that tRNADB-CE is a well-timed database in the era of big sequence data. It is also discussed that batch-learning self-organizing-map with oligonucleotide composition is useful for efficient knowledge discovery from big sequence data. © 2014 Abe, Inokuchi, Yamada, Muto, Iwasaki and Ikemura.

Link information
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2014.00114
ID information
  • DOI : 10.3389/fgene.2014.00114
  • ISSN : 1664-8021
  • SCOPUS ID : 84905642274

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