| Literature DB >> 31016417 |
Ankur Jai Sood1,2, Coby Viner2,3, Michael M Hoffman4,5,6,7.
Abstract
Covalent DNA modifications, such as 5-methylcytosine (5mC), are increasingly the focus of numerous research programs. In eukaryotes, both 5mC and 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC) are now recognized as stable epigenetic marks, with diverse functions. Bacteria, archaea, and viruses contain various other modified DNA nucleobases. Numerous databases describe RNA and histone modifications, but no database specifically catalogues DNA modifications, despite their broad importance in epigenetic regulation. To address this need, we have developed DNAmod: the DNA modification database. DNAmod is an open-source database ( https://dnamod.hoffmanlab.org ) that catalogues DNA modifications and provides a single source to learn about their properties. DNAmod provides a web interface to easily browse and search through these modifications. The database annotates the chemical properties and structures of all curated modified DNA bases, and a much larger list of candidate chemical entities. DNAmod includes manual annotations of available sequencing methods, descriptions of their occurrence in nature, and provides existing and suggested nomenclature. DNAmod enables researchers to rapidly review previous work, select mapping techniques, and track recent developments concerning modified bases of interest.Entities:
Keywords: DNA modifications; Epigenomics; Nucleobases
Year: 2019 PMID: 31016417 PMCID: PMC6478773 DOI: 10.1186/s13321-019-0349-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cheminform ISSN: 1758-2946 Impact factor: 5.514
Possible annotations within DNAmod’s curated (A) sequencing method data and (B) natural occurrence information
| (A) Sequencing method annotations | |
|---|---|
| Field | Terms |
| Mapping method | 〈method abbreviation〉 |
| Method detail | affinity-based, chemical conversion, chemical conversion and immunoprecipitation, chemical tagging, direct detection, DNMT1 conversion, enzyme-mediated chemical tagging, excision repair enzyme-based, restriction endonuclease |
| Resolution | low, high, single-base |
| Qualifier | 5hmU:G mismatch only, CpG contexts only, [low-input or] single-cell, [methylation-insensitive] restriction digestion, microarray probes, salt gradient stratification, specific fragments, strand-specific, target sequences |
Each row lists a field and all terms ever used to annotate it. [square brackets]: optional prefixes. 〈angle brackets〉: description of term, rather than the complete enumeration provided for other terms
aEach row contains all possible instantiations of the field on the left, except that terms within the “Function” field are often combined, as conjunctions
Fig. 1Manually-curated recommended notation, mapping techniques, and natural occurrence data for 5-formylcytosine (5fC). See Table 1 for an explanation of the mapping and natural occurrence table headers
Fig. 2Finding 6-methyladenine by a searching for its abbreviation “6mA” or b via the pie menu
Fig. 3The full modification page for 5-hydroxymethyluracil (5hmU)