| Literature DB >> 24885079 |
Jaeyoung Choi, Nicolas Détry, Ki-Tae Kim, Fred O Asiegbu, Jari P T Valkonen, Yong-Hwan Lee1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Peroxidases are a group of oxidoreductases which mediate electron transfer from hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and organic peroxide to various electron acceptors. They possess a broad spectrum of impact on industry and fungal biology. There are numerous industrial applications using peroxidases, such as to catalyse highly reactive pollutants and to breakdown lignin for recycling of carbon sources. Moreover, genes encoding peroxidases play important roles in fungal pathogenicity in both humans and plants. For better understanding of fungal peroxidases at the genome-level, a novel genomics platform is required. To this end, Fungal Peroxidase Database (fPoxDB; http://peroxidase.riceblast.snu.ac.kr/) has been developed to provide such a genomics platform for this important gene family. DESCRIPTION: In order to identify and classify fungal peroxidases, 24 sequence profiles were built and applied on 331 genomes including 216 from fungi and Oomycetes. In addition, NoxR, which is known to regulate NADPH oxidases (NoxA and NoxB) in fungi, was also added to the pipeline. Collectively, 6,113 genes were predicted to encode 25 gene families, presenting well-separated distribution along the taxonomy. For instance, the genes encoding lignin peroxidase, manganese peroxidase, and versatile peroxidase were concentrated in the rot-causing basidiomycetes, reflecting their ligninolytic capability. As a genomics platform, fPoxDB provides diverse analysis resources, such as gene family predictions based on fungal sequence profiles, pre-computed results of eight bioinformatics programs, similarity search tools, a multiple sequence alignment tool, domain analysis functions, and taxonomic distribution summary, some of which are not available in the previously developed peroxidase resource. In addition, fPoxDB is interconnected with other family web systems, providing extended analysis opportunities.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24885079 PMCID: PMC4029949 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2180-14-117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Figure 1The pipeline and contents of fPoxDB. A schematic diagram of fPoxDB pipeline and contents. A computational prediction pipeline is composed of preparation of raw sequences (A), searching 331 target genomes with 25 sequence profiles (B) and 6,113 predicted genes as the end product (C). The median value for each gene family is indicated by a red line (C).
Summary of peroxidase families found in fungal and Oomycete genomes
| Haem peroxidase | Catalase | 542 | 209 |
| Catalase-peroxidase | 76 | 49 | |
| Cytochrome C peroxidase | 285 | 203 | |
| DyP-type peroxidase D | 45 | 24 | |
| Haloperoxidase | 364 | 75 | |
| Hybrid Ascorbate-Cytochrome C peroxidase | 73 | 48 | |
| Lignin peroxidase | 10 | 1 | |
| Linoleate diol synthase (PGHS like) | 206 | 81 | |
| Manganese peroxidase | 29 | 6 | |
| NADPH oxidase, NoxA | 89 | 84 | |
| NADPH oxidase, NoxB | 77 | 70 | |
| NADPH oxidase, NoxC | 18 | 17 | |
| NADPH oxidase, Duox** | 0 | 0 | |
| NADPH oxidase, Rboh*** | 16 | 5 | |
| Other class II peroxidase | 58 | 22 | |
| Prostaglandin H synthase (Cyclooxygenase) | 13 | 13 | |
| Versatile peroxidase | 7 | 2 | |
| Non-haem peroxidase | 1-Cysteine peroxiredoxin | 245 | 200 |
| Atypical 2-Cysteine peroxiredoxin (typeII, typeV) | 325 | 205 | |
| Atypical 2-Cysteine peroxiredoxin (typeQ, BCP) | 218 | 200 | |
| Carboxymuconolactone decarboxylase | 100 | 73 | |
| Fungi-Bacteria glutathione peroxidase | 437 | 210 | |
| No haem, Vanadium chloroperoxidase | 5 | 5 | |
| Typical 2-Cysteine peroxiredoxin | 278 | 151 | |
| Regulator | NoxR | 93 | 87 |
The gene family names were inherited from the PeroxiBase [26] that contain fungal sequences.
The genes encoding Duox family were exclusively found in the species belonging to the kingdom Metazoa and Proterospongia sp. ATCC 50818 which belongs to the order Choanoflagellida, a close relative to the animals [33].
Only one gene belonging to the Rboh family was found in fungi (Spizellomyces punctatus) while others were found in Oomycetes.
Figure 2Taxonomic distribution of gene families. The average numbers of putative genes for each peroxidase family are plotted against the subphylum-level of taxonomy in fungi and Oomycetes.
Figure 3Web interface and functionalities. A) Web interface of fPoxDB displays well organized graphical charts for better recognition of the distribution of the genes. B) Tools including similarity search (BLAST [41], HMMER [31] and BLASTMatrix [32]) and multiple sequence alignment (ClustalW [42]) are provided via the Favorite Browser. C) Protein domain analysis and TMH analysis can be also done with the sequences collected in Favorites. D) Users’ sequence collection can be further analysed by the tools available at the CFGP 2.0 [32] and other sister databases [39,52-54].