DBD: a transcription factor prediction database
Open Access
- 1 January 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Nucleic Acids Research
- Vol. 34 (90001), D74-D81
- https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkj131
Abstract
Regulation of gene expression influences almost all biological processes in an organism; sequence-specific DNA-binding transcription factors are critical to this control. For most genomes, the repertoire of transcription factors is only partially known. Hitherto transcription factor identification has been largely based on genome annotation pipelines that use pairwise sequence comparisons, which detect only those factors similar to known genes, or on functional classification schemes that amalgamate many types of proteins into the category of 'transcription factor'. Using a novel transcription factor identification method, the DBD transcription factor database fills this void, providing genome-wide transcription factor predictions for organisms from across the tree of life. The prediction method behind DBD identifies sequence- specific DNA-binding transcription factors through homology using profile hidden Markov models (HMMs) of domains. Thus, it is limited to factors that are homologus to those HMMs. The collection of HMMs is taken from two existing databases (Pfam and SUPERFAMILY), and is limited to models that exclusively detect transcription factors that specifically recognize DNA sequences. It does not include basal transcription factors or chromatin-associated proteins, for instance. Based on comparison with experimentally verified annotation, the prediction procedure is between 95 and 99% accurate. Between one quarter and one-half of our genome-wide predicted transcription factors represent previously uncharacterized proteins. The DBD (www.transcriptionfactor.org) consists of predicted transcription factor repertoires for 150 completely sequenced genomes, their domain assignments and the hand curated list of DNA-binding domain HMMs. Users can browse, search or download the predictions by genome, domain family or sequence identifier, view families of transcription factors based on domain architecture and receive predictions for a protein sequence.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Universal Protein Resource (UniProt)Nucleic Acids Research, 2004
- An ORFeome-based Analysis of Human Transcription Factor Genes and the Construction of a Microarray to Interrogate Their ExpressionGenome Research, 2004
- Genomic analysis of regulatory network dynamics reveals large topological changesNature, 2004
- Transcriptional regulatory code of a eukaryotic genomeNature, 2004
- A genome-wide and nonredundant mouse transcription factor databaseBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 2004
- Structure and evolution of transcriptional regulatory networksCurrent Opinion in Structural Biology, 2004
- Evolution of Protein Superfamilies and Bacterial Genome SizeJournal of Molecular Biology, 2004
- RegulonDB (version 4.0): transcriptional regulation, operon organization and growth conditions in Escherichia coli K-12Nucleic Acids Research, 2004
- The SUPERFAMILY database in 2004: additions and improvementsNucleic Acids Research, 2004
- SCOP: a structural classification of proteins database for the investigation of sequences and structures.Journal of Molecular Biology, 1995