Abstract
BackgroundAbiotic and biotic stresses severely affect the growth and reproduction of plants and crops. Determining the critical molecular mechanisms and cellular processes in response to stresses will provide biological insight for addressing both climate change and food crises. RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq) is a revolutionary tool that has been used extensively in plant stress research. However, no existing large-scale RNA-Seq database has been designed to provide information on the stress-specific differentially expressed transcripts that occur across diverse plant species and various stresses.ResultsWe have constructed a comprehensive database, the plant stress RNA-Seq nexus (PSRN), which includes 12 plant species, 26 plant-stress RNA-Seq datasets, and 937 samples. All samples are assigned to 133 stress-specific subsets, which are constructed into 254 subset pairs, a comparison between selected two subsets, for stress-specific differentially expressed transcript identification.ConclusionsPSRN is an open resource for intuitive data exploration, providing expression profiles of coding-transcript/lncRNA and identifying which transcripts are differentially expressed between different stress-specific subsets, in order to support researchers generating new biological insights and hypotheses in molecular breeding or evolution. PSRN is freely available at http://syslab5.nchu.edu.tw/PSRN.
Highlights
Abiotic and biotic stresses severely affect the growth and reproduction of plants and crops
All samples were classified and assigned to 133 stress-specific subsets, which were constructed into 254 subset pairs to describe stress-specific differentially expressed (DE) transcripts from a systematic RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq) analysis
Considering the variants exiting in different analyses, we just compared the expression profile in the same database
Summary
We have constructed a comprehensive database, the plant stress RNA-Seq nexus (PSRN), which includes 12 plant species, 26 plant-stress RNA-Seq datasets, and 937 samples. All samples are assigned to 133 stress-specific subsets, which are constructed into 254 subset pairs, a comparison between selected two subsets, for stress-specific differentially expressed transcript identification
Published Version (Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have