Abstract

AbstractGabiPD ("http://www.gabipd.org/":http://www.gabipd.org/) at the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Plant Physiology constitutes a repository and analysis platform of genomic, transcriptomic, proteomic, and metabolomic plant data provided by the GABI community (Riaño-Pachón et al., 2009). Beside the data, current versions of useful tools are being made accessible via GabiPD, such as MapMan (Usadel et al., 2005) and SATlotyper (Neigenfind et al., 2008). Access to GabiPD is provided via either the web interface or WebServices.In GabiPD, twenty different plant species are currently represented with the model plant A. thaliana on top followed by the crop plants S. tuberosum and H. vulgare. Innovative user interfaces allow interactive access to the different data types, e.g. (i) GreenCards to all text-based information, like sequences and comparative SNP information (e.g., Pajerowska-Mukhtar et al., 2009) (ii) YAMB to comparative genetic maps, (iii) MapManWeb to gene expression or metabolite profiling data mapped onto pathways, or (iv) 2DGelViewer to annotated 2DE gel images. All data types (e.g., clones, protein spots, gene expression data) in GabiPD are pointing to the central Gene GreenCard, where gene information is retrieved from genome annotation projects or UniGene sets (provided by NCBI). With the Gene GreenCards, we provide MapMan and Gene Ontology annotations and ortholog information (currently only between A. thaliana and O. sativa ssp. japonica). Recently, a new graphical representation of transcripts was integrated displaying gene structure (untranslated regions, start and stop codons and exon-exon junctions). Protein domains as well as ESTs, are mapped on the transcript displays. In order to ease the transfer of knowledge from model to crop plants, we have performed similarity-based mappings between closely related species, i.e., O. sativa ssp. japonica and H. vulgare. By the integration of complex data in a framework of existing knowledge, GabiPD provides new insights and allows for new interpretations of plant data.This work is/was supported by the BMBF (GABI grants 0312272, 0313112, 0315046).Neigenfind J et al. (2008) Haplotype inference from unphased SNP data in heterozygous polyploids based on SAT. BMC Genomics 9:356.Pajerowska-Mukhtar K et al. (2009) Single nucleotide polymorphisms in the allene oxide synthase 2 gene are associated with field resistance to late blight in populations of tetraploid potato cultivars. Genetics, doi:"10.1534/genetics.108.094268":http://dx.doi.org/10.1534/genetics.108.094268Riano-Pachon DM et al. (2009) GabiPD: The GABI Primary Database - a plant integrative ‘omics’ database. Nucleic Acids Research 37(Database issue):D954-9, DOI "10.1093/nar/gkn611":http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkn611Usadel B et al (2006) PageMan: an interactive ontology tool to generate, display, and annotate overview graphs for profiling experiments. BMC Bioinformatics 7:535.

Highlights

  • Diego Mauricio Riaño-Pachón, Axel Nagel, Neigenfind J, Robert Wagner, Rico Basekow, Elke Weber, Sabrina Kleessen, Birgit Kersten

  • The GabiPD reference paper has been published in Nucleic Acid Research (Riaño-Pachón et al 2009)

  • Every gene in GabiPD is related to experimental data types

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Summary

Updates in the Gene GreenCard

Links to GabiPD data: e.g., transgenic lines, clones, UniGene sets, Affymetrix probes. Data from different fronts (i.e., genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics and metabolomics) are integrated in GabiPD, originating from more than 20 different biological species. A Mapman ontology annotation into the Rice and Arabidopsis Gene GreenCards and into the GreenCards describing Barley affymetrix gene probes. Every gene in GabiPD is related to experimental data types. In the figure users can identify related cDNA Exon-exon junction clones and affymetrix probes in the Barley microarray. B Orthologues between Arabidopsis and Rice were identified using INPARANOID, this will ease the transfer of functional information between this species. C The new cDNA display allows users to identify cDNA clones that map to special regions of their gene of interest (e.g., UTRs, protein domains)

Barley gene expression data and a road for the transfer
Access to GabiPD References
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