Abstract

BackgroundReproduction in pigs is one of the most economically important traits. To improve the reproductive performances, numerous studies have focused on the identification of candidate genes. However, it is hard for one to read all literatures thoroughly to get information. So we have developed a database providing candidate genes for reproductive researches in pig by mining and processing existing biological literatures in human and pigs, named as ReCGiP.DescriptionBased on text-mining and comparative genomics, ReCGiP presents diverse information of reproduction-relevant genes in human and pig. The genes were sorted by the degree of relevance with the reproduction topics and were visualized in a gene's co-occurrence network where two genes were connected if they were co-cited in a PubMed abstract. The 'hub' genes which had more 'neighbors' were thought to be have more important functions and could be identified by the user in their web browser. In addition, ReCGiP provided integrated GO annotation, OMIM and biological pathway information collected from the Internet. Both pig and human gene information can be found in the database, which is now available.ConclusionsReCGiP is a unique database providing information on reproduction related genes for pig. It can be used in the area of the molecular genetics, the genetic linkage map, and the breeding of the pig and other livestock. Moreover, it can be used as a reference for human reproduction research.

Highlights

  • Reproduction in pigs is one of the most economically important traits

  • Based on genetic similarity between human and pig and the intensive studies on human reproductive genetic mechanism, we developed ReCGiP (Database of Reproduction Candidate Genes in Pigs based on bibliomics)

  • The ReCGiP database aims to provide a resource of candidate genes for pig reproduction

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Summary

Introduction

Reproduction in pigs is one of the most economically important traits. To improve the reproductive performances, numerous studies have focused on the identification of candidate genes. We have developed a database providing candidate genes for reproductive researches in pig by mining and processing existing biological literatures in human and pigs, named as ReCGiP. Description: Based on text-mining and comparative genomics, ReCGiP presents diverse information of reproduction-relevant genes in human and pig. ReCGiP provided integrated GO annotation, OMIM and biological pathway information collected from the Internet. Both pig and human gene information can be found in the database, which is available. Traditional selection methods based on estimated breeding value are expensive, laborious and time consuming. It results in only low genetic gain.

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