BMC Plant Biology (Aug 2021)

OrchidBase 4.0: a database for orchid genomics and molecular biology

  • Yu-Yun Hsiao,
  • Chih-Hsiung Fu,
  • Sau-Yee Ho,
  • Chung-I Li,
  • You-Yi Chen,
  • Wan-Lin Wu,
  • Jeen-Shing Wang,
  • Di-Yang Zhang,
  • Wen-Qi Hu,
  • Xia Yu,
  • Wei-Hong Sun,
  • Zhuang Zhou,
  • Ke-Wei Liu,
  • Laiqiang Huang,
  • Si-Ren Lan,
  • Hong-Hwa Chen,
  • Wei-Sheng Wu,
  • Zhong-Jian Liu,
  • Wen-Chieh Tsai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12870-021-03140-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Background The Orchid family is the largest families of the monocotyledons and an economically important ornamental plant worldwide. Given the pivotal role of this plant to humans, botanical researchers and breeding communities should have access to valuable genomic and transcriptomic information of this plant. Previously, we established OrchidBase, which contains expressed sequence tags (ESTs) from different tissues and developmental stages of Phalaenopsis as well as biotic and abiotic stress-treated Phalaenopsis. The database includes floral transcriptomic sequences from 10 orchid species across all the five subfamilies of Orchidaceae. Description Recently, the whole-genome sequences of Apostasia shenzhenica, Dendrobium catenatum, and Phalaenopsis equestris were de novo assembled and analyzed. These datasets were used to develop OrchidBase 4.0, including genomic and transcriptomic data for these three orchid species. OrchidBase 4.0 offers information for gene annotation, gene expression with fragments per kilobase of transcript per millions mapped reads (FPKM), KEGG pathways and BLAST search. In addition, assembled genome sequences and location of genes and miRNAs could be visualized by the genome browser. The online resources in OrchidBase 4.0 can be accessed by browsing or using BLAST. Users can also download the assembled scaffold sequences and the predicted gene and protein sequences of these three orchid species. Conclusions OrchidBase 4.0 is the first database that contain the whole-genome sequences and annotations of multiple orchid species. OrchidBase 4.0 is available at http://orchidbase.itps.ncku.edu.tw/

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