Abstract

Many species of dematiaceous fungi are associated with allergic reactions and potentially fatal diseases in human, especially in tropical climates. Over the past 10 years, we have isolated more than 400 dematiaceous fungi from various clinical samples. In this study, DemaDb, an integrated database was designed to support the integration and analysis of dematiaceous fungal genomes. A total of 92 072 putative genes and 6527 pathways that identified in eight dematiaceous fungi (Bipolaris papendorfii UM 226, Daldinia eschscholtzii UM 1400, D. eschscholtzii UM 1020, Pyrenochaeta unguis-hominis UM 256, Ochroconis mirabilis UM 578, Cladosporium sphaerospermum UM 843, Herpotrichiellaceae sp. UM 238 and Pleosporales sp. UM 1110) were deposited in DemaDb. DemaDb includes functional annotations for all predicted gene models in all genomes, such as Gene Ontology, EuKaryotic Orthologous Groups, Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG), Pfam and InterProScan. All predicted protein models were further functionally annotated to Carbohydrate-Active enzymes, peptidases, secondary metabolites and virulence factors. DemaDb Genome Browser enables users to browse and visualize entire genomes with annotation data including gene prediction, structure, orientation and custom feature tracks. The Pathway Browser based on the KEGG pathway database allows users to look into molecular interaction and reaction networks for all KEGG annotated genes. The availability of downloadable files containing assembly, nucleic acid, as well as protein data allows the direct retrieval for further downstream works. DemaDb is a useful resource for fungal research community especially those involved in genome-scale analysis, functional genomics, genetics and disease studies of dematiaceous fungi.Database URL: http://fungaldb.um.edu.my

Highlights

  • The kingdom fungi is made up of large eukaryotic organisms consisting of more than 100 000 species, including unicellular yeasts and multicellular fungi known as moulds and mushrooms [1]

  • From 2008 to 2015, we have isolated a total of 437 dematiaceous fungi in the Mycology Unit of University Malaya Medical Centre (UMMC), Malaysia

  • Considering that dematiaceous fungal genomes will be generated from future projects, it is essential to manage and integrate the data generated from different analyses in a more organized manner

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Summary

Original article

Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/database/article/doi/10.1093/database/baw008/2630155 by guest on 02 November 2021 Chee Sian Kuan1, Su Mei Yew1, Chai Ling Chan1, Yue Fen Toh1, Kok Wei Lee2, Wei-Hien Cheong2, Wai-Yan Yee2, Chee-Choong Hoh2, Soon-Joo Yap2 and Kee Peng Ng1,* Citation details: Kuan, C.S., Yew, S.M., Chan, C.L. et al DemaDb: an integrated dematiaceous fungal genomes database. Database (2016) Vol 2016: article ID baw008; doi:10.1093/database/baw008

Introduction
Database Organization
Usage and Utility of Basic Data
Skin scraping Blood
Uniform Functional Annotation
Family type
Genome Browser
Pathway Browser
Future Perspective

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