MGE-PortalWiki/BLAST: Difference between revisions
imported>MichaelBeckstette No edit summary |
imported>MichaelBeckstette No edit summary |
||
Line 68: | Line 68: | ||
The marine organism databases contain sequences from the following taxonomic groups. Be aware of changes and enhancements of this database in the near future. Suggestions for further taxonomic categories or more fine grained categories are welcome. | The marine organism databases contain sequences from the following taxonomic groups. Be aware of changes and enhancements of this database in the near future. Suggestions for further taxonomic categories or more fine grained categories are welcome. | ||
* Annelida:True segmented worms capable of movement, with a large gut. The phylum includes the ragworms and lugworms familiar to anglers. | * ''Annelida'': True segmented worms capable of movement, with a large gut. The phylum includes the ragworms and lugworms familiar to anglers. | ||
* Cetacea:Whales + Dolphins | * ''Cetacea'': Whales + Dolphins | ||
* Cnidaria | * ''Cnidaria'': Cnidaria, the major group of invertebrates that includes the sea anemones, corals, jellyfishes, hydroids, and animals that contain 'cnida' stinging capsules. | ||
* Crustacea (Crabs): Aquatic gill-breathing Arthropods | * ''Crustacea'' (Crabs): Aquatic gill-breathing Arthropods | ||
* Echinodermata: Starfishes, Sea Urchins, Sea Cucumbers and Related Invertebrates | * ''Echinodermata'': Starfishes, Sea Urchins, Sea Cucumbers and Related Invertebrates | ||
Marine animals that are radially symmetrical (most species) and contain a unique water vascular system, and tube feet that are used for movement, respiration, protection (spines) and assist in the capture of food. | Marine animals that are radially symmetrical (most species) and contain a unique water vascular system, and tube feet that are used for movement, respiration, protection (spines) and assist in the capture of food. | ||
The Echinodermata are exclusively marine, and most species are intolerant of immersion in low salinity water. One remarkable observation is that they are rarely settled on by barnacles, mussels and other fouling organisms. | The Echinodermata are exclusively marine, and most species are intolerant of immersion in low salinity water. One remarkable observation is that they are rarely settled on by barnacles, mussels and other fouling organisms. | ||
* Fishes | * Fishes | ||
* Algae | * Algae | ||
* Bryozoa (Ectoprocta): Bryozoa are aquatic colonial animals, which are abundant in modern marine environments, and have been important components of the fossil record. In places, the skeletal remains are so abundant that the fossils become an important rock-forming material. If you need a common name, then you can call them 'sea mats', 'moss animals' or 'lace corals' for some forms. The majority are marine, although brackish-water and freshwater forms are moderately common. | * ''Bryozoa'' (Ectoprocta): Bryozoa are aquatic colonial animals, which are abundant in modern marine environments, and have been important components of the fossil record. In places, the skeletal remains are so abundant that the fossils become an important rock-forming material. If you need a common name, then you can call them 'sea mats', 'moss animals' or 'lace corals' for some forms. The majority are marine, although brackish-water and freshwater forms are moderately common. | ||
* Platyhelminthes (flatworms) | * ''Platyhelminthes'' (flatworms) | ||
* Mollusca: Soft bodied animals with a hard external shell (mussels, winkles, snails), or an internal shell (sea hares, cuttlefish) or have lost their shell in the course of evolution (nudibranchs). Molluscs have a mantle that secretes the calcium carbonate that makes up the shell. They inhabitat numerous different environments with a large number living in the sea. | * ''Mollusca'': Soft bodied animals with a hard external shell (mussels, winkles, snails), or an internal shell (sea hares, cuttlefish) or have lost their shell in the course of evolution (nudibranchs). Molluscs have a mantle that secretes the calcium carbonate that makes up the shell. They inhabitat numerous different environments with a large number living in the sea. | ||
* Porifera(sponges) | * ''Porifera(sponges)'' | ||
* Tunicata (Urochordata): tunicates or sea squirts, are more closely related to humans than any other invertebrate group. This is because larval tunicates have several chordate structures - including a nerve chord and a notochord. | * ''Tunicata (Urochordata)'': tunicates or sea squirts, are more closely related to humans than any other invertebrate group. This is because larval tunicates have several chordate structures - including a nerve chord and a notochord. | ||
* CephalochOrdata (Lancelets): With about twenty-five species inhabiting shallow tropical and temperate oceans, the Cephalochordata are a very small branch of the animal kingdom. Known as lancelets or as amphioxus (from the Greek for "both [ends] pointed," in reference to their shape), cephalochordates are small, eel-like, unprepossessing animals that spend much of their time buried in sand. However, because of their remarkable morphology, they have proved crucial in understanding the morphology and evolution of chordates in general -- including vertebrates. | * ''CephalochOrdata'' (Lancelets): With about twenty-five species inhabiting shallow tropical and temperate oceans, the Cephalochordata are a very small branch of the animal kingdom. Known as lancelets or as amphioxus (from the Greek for "both [ends] pointed," in reference to their shape), cephalochordates are small, eel-like, unprepossessing animals that spend much of their time buried in sand. However, because of their remarkable morphology, they have proved crucial in understanding the morphology and evolution of chordates in general -- including vertebrates. |
Revision as of 21:38, 14 January 2005
Informations about Sequence Databases
General databases
Nucleotide sequence databases:
nt: nucleotide sequence database, with entries from all traditional divisions of GenBank, EMBL, and DDBJ excluding bulk divisions (gss, sts, pat, est, and htg divisions. wgs entries are also excluded. Not non-redundant.
est: EST division of GenBank, EMBL,and DDBJ
gss: GSS division of GenBank, EMBL,and DDBJ
htgs: HTG division of GenBank, EMBL,and DDBJ
env_nt: Enviromental samples database
Protein sequence databases:
nr: non-redundant protein sequence database with entries from GenPept, Swissprot, PIR, PDF, PDB, and NCBI RefSeq
env_nr: enviromental samples database
Specialized Databases
All specialized databases are subset of the general nt,est,gss,htgs, and nr databases.
Algae specific databases contain sequences from the following taxonomic groups:
- Dinophyceae (dinoflagellates)
- Chlorarachniophyceae (chlorarachniophytes), eukaryotes
- Cryptophyta (cryptomonads), class, cryptomonads
- Euglenida (euglenids), phylum, euglenoids
- Glaucocystophyceae (glaucocystophytes), class, eukaryotes
- Haptophyceae (coccolithophorids), haptophytes
- Rhodophyta (red algae), red algae
- Bacillariophyta (diatoms), phylum, diatoms
- Chrysophyceae (golden algae), class, chrysophytes
- Dictyochophyceae (silicoflagellates), class, eukaryotes
- Eustigmatophyceae (eustigmatophytes), phylum, eukaryotes
- Phaeophyceae (brown algae), phylum, brown algae
- Phaeothamniophyceae, class, eukaryotes
- Raphidophyceae (raphidophytes), class, eukaryotes
- Xanthophyceae (yellow-green algae), phylum, xanthophytes
- Chlorophyta (green algae), phylum, green algae
- Mesostigmatophyceae, class, green plants
We offer the following algae specific sequence databases:
- nt_algae: algae specific subset of GenBank, EMBL,and DDBJ (nucleotide)
- est_algae: algae specificSubset of EST division of GenBank, EMBL,and DDBJ (nucleotide)
- gss_algae: algae specific subset of GSS division of GenBank, EMBL,and DDBJ (nucleotide)
- htgs_algae :algae specific subset of HTGS division of GenBank, EMBL,and DDBJ (nucleotide)
- nr_algae: algae specific subset of NCBIs non redundant protein database
Fish specific databases contain sequences from the following taxonomic groups:
- Hyperotreti, chordates
- Chondrichthyes (cartilaginous fishes) class, vertebrates
- Actinopterygii (ray-finned fishes) class, bony fishes
- Hyperoartia, vertebrates
We offer the following fish sequence databases:
- nt_fishes: fishes specific subset of GenBank, EMBL,and DDBJ (nucleotide)
- est_fishes: fishes specificSubset of EST division of GenBank, EMBL,and DDBJ (nucleotide)
- gss_fishes: fishes specific subset of GSS division of GenBank, EMBL,and DDBJ (nucleotide)
- htgs_fishes :fishes specific subset of HTGS division of GenBank, EMBL,and DDBJ (nucleotide)
- nr_fishes: fishes specific subset of NCBIs non redundant protein database
Databases of marine organisms
The marine organism databases contain sequences from the following taxonomic groups. Be aware of changes and enhancements of this database in the near future. Suggestions for further taxonomic categories or more fine grained categories are welcome.
- Annelida: True segmented worms capable of movement, with a large gut. The phylum includes the ragworms and lugworms familiar to anglers.
- Cetacea: Whales + Dolphins
- Cnidaria: Cnidaria, the major group of invertebrates that includes the sea anemones, corals, jellyfishes, hydroids, and animals that contain 'cnida' stinging capsules.
- Crustacea (Crabs): Aquatic gill-breathing Arthropods
- Echinodermata: Starfishes, Sea Urchins, Sea Cucumbers and Related Invertebrates
Marine animals that are radially symmetrical (most species) and contain a unique water vascular system, and tube feet that are used for movement, respiration, protection (spines) and assist in the capture of food. The Echinodermata are exclusively marine, and most species are intolerant of immersion in low salinity water. One remarkable observation is that they are rarely settled on by barnacles, mussels and other fouling organisms.
- Fishes
- Algae
- Bryozoa (Ectoprocta): Bryozoa are aquatic colonial animals, which are abundant in modern marine environments, and have been important components of the fossil record. In places, the skeletal remains are so abundant that the fossils become an important rock-forming material. If you need a common name, then you can call them 'sea mats', 'moss animals' or 'lace corals' for some forms. The majority are marine, although brackish-water and freshwater forms are moderately common.
- Platyhelminthes (flatworms)
- Mollusca: Soft bodied animals with a hard external shell (mussels, winkles, snails), or an internal shell (sea hares, cuttlefish) or have lost their shell in the course of evolution (nudibranchs). Molluscs have a mantle that secretes the calcium carbonate that makes up the shell. They inhabitat numerous different environments with a large number living in the sea.
- Porifera(sponges)
- Tunicata (Urochordata): tunicates or sea squirts, are more closely related to humans than any other invertebrate group. This is because larval tunicates have several chordate structures - including a nerve chord and a notochord.
- CephalochOrdata (Lancelets): With about twenty-five species inhabiting shallow tropical and temperate oceans, the Cephalochordata are a very small branch of the animal kingdom. Known as lancelets or as amphioxus (from the Greek for "both [ends] pointed," in reference to their shape), cephalochordates are small, eel-like, unprepossessing animals that spend much of their time buried in sand. However, because of their remarkable morphology, they have proved crucial in understanding the morphology and evolution of chordates in general -- including vertebrates.