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NCBI’s Bioinformatics Resources Michele R. Tennant, Ph.D., M.L.I.S. Health Science Center Libraries U.F. Genetics Institute January 2015
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Entrez Nucleotides
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Entrez Nucleotides (GenBank) Database of nucleotide sequences (ATGC) Actually contains data from several databases - GenBank, EMBL, DDBJ, RefSeq Hard to search because many submitting scientists send in redundant information and poorly annotated information
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Nucleotide Data Domain As of December 15, 2014 Over 184,938,063,614 bases Over 179,295,769 sequence records Some complete genomes and chromosomes
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So Why So Hard to Search? No controlled vocabulary - lose power of MeSH - must OR synonyms. Often miss the records you want. Archival - quality of annotations depends on the submitter (especially features field); little to no quality control; spelling errors! Often miss the records you want. Redundant - lots of records for the same gene; partial records, etc. Often pull up records you don’t want.
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GenBank Sample Record Before searching, we will look at a GenBank sample record Note that the “ Features ” field provides useful biological information, and may be searched
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Click any link in sample record to access definition of field and search tips “Definition” field acts as record title – search [titl] Unique identifier; assigned by NCBI; required by journals/grants Link to PubMed citation/abstract
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The “Features” field provides the most biological information; search as [fkey] Numbers indicate location on the nucleotide sequence
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…3158
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GenBank Identifiers Accession Number - U49845 [accn] Unique identifier; does not change Letter prefix no longer has significance Version - U49845.1 If any change to sequence, version U49845.2 created GenInfo Identifier (GI number) [uid] Run parallel to accession.version system; change in sequence changes number
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Searching “Nucleotides”Nucleotides Database is difficult to search: Redundant records Archival - poor or missing annotation Best searches are done using commands; need a class to learn all Practice search – search for sequences for human presenilin 1 Is there anything odd about the some of the retrieved results?
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Search for HUMAN presenilin 1 But end up with rat, mouse, etc. Choose “nucleotide” from dropdown, then click “search”
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Searching “Nucleotides” We retrieved the non-human and PSEN2 (rather than PSEN1) records because the computer looked for the terms “ human ” and “ presenilin 1 ” ANYWHERE in the record (click on details tab to see how the computer parsed your search) Use complex boolean searching to clean this up: term [field] AND term [field]
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Searching “Nucleotides”Nucleotides How to get rid of non-human sequences? Search human [orgn] (this works for any taxon) How to get rid of non-presenilin 1 sequences? Another trick – search PSEN1 [gene] Note – you may miss relevant sequences, but should not pick up irrelevant sequences The sequences that you miss are the ones that have not been annotated with the current official gene symbol in the “ gene ” field DO NOT use this method if you need to find every sequence for a particular gene Human [orgn] AND PSEN1 [gene]
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Use these filters to choose molecule type, confine to RefSeq records This is the search that was completed using fields (orgn, gene) and filters
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How Can I Find “Best” SequencesSequences Non-redundant, curated subset of the sequence data domains Contains one record for each gene or splice variant from each organism represented Records can be thought of as “ review articles ” for sequences “ Best ” (usually longest) sequence used as seed Value-added annotations provided by experts Easy – a tab now exists to limit retrieval to just RefSeq
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Click on the RefSeq link to retrieve only the “best” sequences (highly annotated, complete, nonredundant) The typical RefSeq accession number format: 2 letters, an underscore, and then numbers
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Viewing Formats The “ Default ” view is the standard GenBank record GenBank Researchers often use the “ FASTA ” format for analysis Change the record format at the “ Display ” pull-down menu
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Entrez Proteins
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Contains data from several databases: SwissProt, PIR, PRF, PDB Translations from annotated coding regions in GenBank and RefSeq Redundant archival data domain of publicly available protein sequences
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Searching Entrez Proteins Searched like Entrez Nucleotides “Filters” choices differ; includes molecular weight and sequence length filters
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Entrez Gene
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Gene Pulls together information (sequences, structures, literature, gene models, pathways, etc.) for genes Best place to start for “ gene-centered ” info One record per gene per organism Search by names, symbols, accessions, publications, GO terms, chromosome numbers, E.C. numbers, etc.
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Search using gene symbol Could have searched under any of these aliases (unlike GenBank where you would have to try them all)
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Official gene symbol as determined by the Human Genome Nomenclature Commission
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Summary of protein, function and disease- causing mutations; from RefSeq record Links to PubMed records that provide evidence of function – any researcher can add these
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Links to OMIM records of phenotype/ disease Gene Ontology terms form a controlled vocabulary with three components – biological process, molecular function, and cellular component Links to homology maps Links to protein interactions
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Pathway info may be available from the Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes Sequence and domain links Links to GeneReviews – clinical resource
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Taxonomy Browser
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Search Taxonomy Browser Taxonomy BrowserTaxonomy Browser How many genera from the family Iguanidae are represented by sequence data? How many nucleotide and protein sequences are available for the family?
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Entrez Searching Summary
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To Find Everything(?) Broaden Search OR together synonyms OR together related terms (gene name, gene symbol, protein name, alternate spellings, disorder) Don’t specify a field- search entire record Truncation - use * at end of word root Click “Related Records” Try using Taxonomy Browser to pick up all taxa in a particular group
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Fewer/Best Records Narrow Search Search particular fields: PubMed - MeSH Browser, subheadings, major MeSH Nucleotide - features, title, gene, properties, organism Use “Filters” Search only the RefSeq database
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Will Entrez Find Every Sequence Record? No!!! Entrez relies on annotation of records, so you are searching solely on “terminology” Some records are not annotated, some records are poorly or incorrectly annotated To find all useful sequences – need to search on sequence itself Related sequence link BLAST
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Entrez “Related Records” Will vary depending on data domain PubMed related articles PubMed Based on a “word weight” algorithm – MeSH, title, abstract words In order by weight (highest weight first) Nucleotide and protein related sequences Nucleotide Based on basic BLAST search In order by best BLAST score
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