4.8 Article

The carbohydrate-active enzyme database: functions and literature

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 50, Issue D1, Pages D571-D577

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkab1045

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The CAZy database, freely available for browsing and download, is deeply rooted in human curation and plays a crucial role in maintaining and updating family classification, classifying new sequences, and presenting functional information. Over the past 8 years, there has been an increase in novel families and extensive annotations conducted, highlighting the significant amount of work involved in analyzing and reporting biochemical data from the literature.
Thirty years have elapsed since the emergence of the classification of carbohydrate-active enzymes in sequence-based families that became the CAZy database over 20 years ago, freely available for browsing and download at www.cazy.org. In the era of large scale sequencing and high-throughput Biology, it is important to examine the position of this specialist database that is deeply rooted in human curation. The three primary tasks of the CAZy curators are (i) to maintain and update the family classification of this class of enzymes, (ii) to classify sequences newly released by GenBank and the Protein Data Bank and (iii) to capture and present functional information for each family. The CAZy website is updated once a month. Here we briefly summarize the increase in novel families and the annotations conducted during the last 8 years. We present several important changes that facilitate taxonomic navigation, and allow to download the entirety of the annotations. Most importantly we highlight the considerable amount of work that accompanies the analysis and report of biochemical data from the literature.

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