4.8 Article

OrthoDB v11: annotation of orthologs in the widest sampling of organismal diversity

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 51, Issue D1, Pages D445-D451

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkac998

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OrthoDB provides evolutionary and functional annotations of genes in a diverse range of organisms. It offers a comprehensive coverage of species diversity by sampling diverse organisms with high-quality genomic data. The update of underlying data and the scalability of the OrthoLoger software enhance the accuracy of ortholog delineation and allow mapping of novel gene sets. The web interface of OrthoDB has been further developed, providing a pairwise orthology view between any gene and other sampled species.
OrthoDB provides evolutionary and functional annotations of genes in a diverse sampling of eukaryotes, prokaryotes, and viruses. Genomics continues to accelerate our exploration of gene diversity and orthology is the most precise way of bridging gene functional knowledge with the rapidly expanding universe of genomic sequences. OrthoDB samples the most diverse organisms with the best quality genomics data to provide the leading coverage of species diversity. This update of the underlying data to over 18 000 prokaryotes and almost 2000 eukaryotes with over 100 million genes propels the coverage to another level. This achievement also demonstrates the scalability of the underlying OrthoLoger software for delineation of orthologs, freely available from https://orthologer.ezlab.org . In addition to the ab-initio computations of gene orthology used for the OrthoDB release, the OrthoLoger software allows mapping of novel gene sets to precomputed orthologs and thereby links to their annotations. The LEMMI-style benchmarking of OrthoLoger ensures its state-of-the-art performance and is available from https://lemortho.ezlab.org. The OrthoDB web interface has been further developed to include a pairwise orthology view from any gene to any other sampled species. OrthoDB-computed evolutionary annotations as well as extensively collated functional annotations can be accessed via REST API or SPARQL/RDF, downloaded or browsed online from https://www.orthodb.org.

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