| Literature DB >> 34788852 |
Zhongyan Li1,2,3, Shangfu Li3, Mengqi Luo3, Jhih-Hua Jhong3, Wenshuo Li3,4, Lantian Yao3,4, Yuxuan Pang3,4, Zhuo Wang3, Rulan Wang3,4, Renfei Ma3, Jinhan Yu3, Yuqi Huang2,3, Xiaoning Zhu2,3, Qifan Cheng2,3, Hexiang Feng2,3, Jiahong Zhang2,3, Chunxuan Wang2,3, Justin Bo-Kai Hsu5, Wen-Chi Chang6, Feng-Xiang Wei1,7,8, Hsien-Da Huang1,2,3, Tzong-Yi Lee2,3.
Abstract
Protein post-translational modifications (PTMs) play an important role in different cellular processes. In view of the importance of PTMs in cellular functions and the massive data accumulated by the rapid development of mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics, this paper presents an update of dbPTM with over 2 777 000 PTM substrate sites obtained from existing databases and manual curation of literature, of which more than 2 235 000 entries are experimentally verified. This update has manually curated over 42 new modification types that were not included in the previous version. Due to the increasing number of studies on the mechanism of PTMs in the past few years, a great deal of upstream regulatory proteins of PTM substrate sites have been revealed. The updated dbPTM thus collates regulatory information from databases and literature, and merges them into a protein-protein interaction network. To enhance the understanding of the association between PTMs and molecular functions/cellular processes, the functional annotations of PTMs are curated and integrated into the database. In addition, the existing PTM-related resources, including annotation databases and prediction tools are also renewed. Overall, in this update, we would like to provide users with the most abundant data and comprehensive annotations on PTMs of proteins. The updated dbPTM is now freely accessible at https://awi.cuhk.edu.cn/dbPTM/.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 34788852 PMCID: PMC8728263 DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkab1017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nucleic Acids Res ISSN: 0305-1048 Impact factor: 16.971
Figure 1.Schematic diagram of the improvements and advances in dbPTM 2022 update.
Comparison of data statistics of relevant information between dbPTM 2022 and the previous version.
| Description | dbPTM 2019 | dbPTM 2022 |
|---|---|---|
| Experimental validated PTM sites | 908 917 | 2 235 664 |
| Species of PTM tdsubstrates | 1550 | 7070 |
| PTM types | 34 | 76 |
| Integrated online databases and tools | 148 | 258 |
| Integrated PTM resources | 30 | 41 |
| Disease-associated PTM sites | 350 | 2846 |
| PTM pairs (PTM crosstalk) | 169 | 370 |
| Functions of PTM sites | N/A | 12 079 |
| Upstream regulatory relationships | N/A | 44 753 |
Figure 2.A case study to present the upstream regulatory proteins of serine/threonine–protein kinase Chk2. The known kinases that phosphorylate Chk2 for each site and E3 ubiquitin ligases modifying Chk2 are illustrated in the web page. The sources of each item including external databases and literatures are shown as well.
Figure 3.The regulatory network of CHK2. The colors of dots represent the different roles of the nodes. Purple: the target protein, CHK2 (the keyword searched: CHK2_HUMAN); brown: E3 ligase; green: kinase; and light green: general proteins.
Figure 4.The functional annotations of PTM sites. The brief functional descriptions of 14–3–3 protein zeta/delta PTM sites are provided. The corresponding supporting references can be viewed by clicking on PubMed IDs.