| Literature DB >> 17062619 |
Gang Wu1, Yuanpu Zheng, Imran Qureshi, Htar Thant Zin, Tyler Beck, Blazej Bulka, Stephen J Freeland.
Abstract
Here we present the Synthetic Gene Database (SGDB): a relational database that houses sequences and associated experimental information on synthetic (artificially engineered) genes from all peer-reviewed studies published to date. At present, the database comprises information from more than 200 published experiments. This resource not only provides reference material to guide experimentalists in designing new genes that improve protein expression, but also offers a dataset for analysis by bioinformaticians who seek to test ideas regarding the underlying factors that influence gene expression. The SGDB was built under MySQL database management system. We also offer an XML schema for standardized data description of synthetic genes. Users can access the database at http://www.evolvingcode.net/codon/sgdb/index.php, or batch downloads all information through XML files. Moreover, users may visually compare the coding sequences of a synthetic gene and its natural counterpart with an integrated web tool at http://www.evolvingcode.net/codon/sgdb/aligner.php, and discuss questions, findings and related information on an associated e-forum at http://www.evolvingcode.net/forum/viewforum.php?f=27.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17062619 PMCID: PMC1781117 DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkl648
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nucleic Acids Res ISSN: 0305-1048 Impact factor: 16.971
Figure 1The Entity-Relationship model illustrates the logical structure of the SGDB. Each table (square) is an entity. The relationships between the three entities are: (i) each publication in the 'Literature' table reported one or many natural genes, conversely, each natural gene in the 'WTGene' table must have exactly one related publication; (ii) a natural gene may have one or many versions of synthetic genes in the 'SyntheticGene' table, while a synthetic gene must have exactly one natural counterpart.
Figure 2A screenshot of the SGDB. This browse page lists all synthetic genes in the SGDB. Each field underlined is sortable. A search box is present on every page of the SGDB, allowing users to search a synthetic gene according to various fields.