dbAPIS: a database of anti-prokaryotic immune system genes

Author:

Yan Yuchen1,Zheng Jinfang2ORCID,Zhang Xinpeng1,Yin Yanbin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Nebraska Food for Health Center, Department of Food Science and Technology, University of Nebraska - Lincoln , Lincoln , NE  68588 , USA

2. Zhejiang Lab, Hangzhou , Zhejiang  311121 , China

Abstract

Abstract Anti-prokaryotic immune system (APIS) proteins, typically encoded by phages, prophages, and plasmids, inhibit prokaryotic immune systems (e.g. restriction modification, toxin-antitoxin, CRISPR-Cas). A growing number of APIS genes have been characterized and dispersed in the literature. Here we developed dbAPIS (https://bcb.unl.edu/dbAPIS), as the first literature curated data repository for experimentally verified APIS genes and their associated protein families. The key features of dbAPIS include: (i) experimentally verified APIS genes with their protein sequences, functional annotation, PDB or AlphaFold predicted structures, genomic context, sequence and structural homologs from different microbiome/virome databases; (ii) classification of APIS proteins into sequence-based families and construction of hidden Markov models (HMMs); (iii) user-friendly web interface for data browsing by the inhibited immune system types or by the hosts, and functions for searching and batch downloading of pre-computed data; (iv) Inclusion of all types of APIS proteins (except for anti-CRISPRs) that inhibit a variety of prokaryotic defense systems (e.g. RM, TA, CBASS, Thoeris, Gabija). The current release of dbAPIS contains 41 verified APIS proteins and ∼4400 sequence homologs of 92 families and 38 clans. dbAPIS will facilitate the discovery of novel anti-defense genes and genomic islands in phages, by providing a user-friendly data repository and a web resource for an easy homology search against known APIS proteins.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

United States Department of Agriculture

Nebraska Tobacco Settlement Biomedical Research Enhancement Funds

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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