Szakonyi Dóra
Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência, 2780-156 Oeiras, Portugal.
Plant Methods. 2016 Feb 15;12:15. doi: 10.1186/s13007-016-0115-9. eCollection 2016.
In the post-genomic era, biological databases provide an easy access to a wide variety of scientific data. The vast quantity of literature calls for curated databases where existing knowledge is carefully organized in order to aid novel discoveries. Leaves, the main photosynthetic organs are not only vital for plant growth but also essential for maintaining the global ecosystem by producing oxygen and food. Therefore, studying and understanding leaf formation and growth are key objectives in biology. Arabidopsis thaliana to this date remains the prime experimental model organism in plant science.
LEAFDATA was created as an easily accessible and searchable web tool to assemble a relevant collection of Arabidopsis leaf literature. LEAFDATA currently contains 13,553 categorized statements from 380 processed publications. LEAFDATA can be searched for genes of interest using Arabidopsis Genome Initiative identifiers, for selected papers by means of PubMed IDs, authors and specific keywords. The results page contains details of the original publications, text fragments from the curated literature grouped according to information types and direct links to PubMed pages of the original papers.
The LEAFDATA database offers access to searchable entries curated from a large number of scientific publications. Due to the unprecedented details of annotations and the fact that LEAFDATA already provides records about approximately 1600 individual loci, this database is useful for the entire plant research community.
在后基因组时代,生物数据库提供了对各种科学数据的便捷访问。大量的文献需要经过整理的数据库,其中现有知识经过精心组织以辅助新的发现。叶片作为主要的光合器官,不仅对植物生长至关重要,而且通过产生氧气和食物对维持全球生态系统也必不可少。因此,研究和理解叶片的形成与生长是生物学的关键目标。拟南芥至今仍是植物科学中主要的实验模式生物。
LEAFDATA是作为一个易于访问和搜索的网络工具创建的,用于汇集拟南芥叶片文献的相关集合。LEAFDATA目前包含来自380篇经过处理的出版物的13553条分类陈述。可以使用拟南芥基因组计划标识符搜索感兴趣的基因,通过PubMed ID、作者和特定关键词搜索选定的论文。结果页面包含原始出版物的详细信息、根据信息类型分组的整理文献中的文本片段以及到原始论文PubMed页面的直接链接。
LEAFDATA数据库提供了对从大量科学出版物中整理出来的可搜索条目的访问。由于注释的细节前所未有的丰富,以及LEAFDATA已经提供了大约1600个单个基因座的记录,该数据库对整个植物研究界都很有用。