TGIF-DB: terse genomics interface for developing botany

Objectives Pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum) is a staple cereal crop for semi-arid regions. Its whole genome sequence and deduced putative gene sequences are available. However, the functions of many pearl millet genes are unknown. Situations are similar for other crop species such as garden asparagus (Asparagus officinalis), chickpea (Cicer arietinum) and Tartary buckwheat (Fagopyrum tataricum). The objective of the data presented here was to improve functional annotations of genes of pearl millet, garden asparagus, chickpea and Tartary buckwheat with gene annotations of model plants, to systematically provide such annotations as well as their sequences on a website, and thereby to promote genomics for those crops. Data description Sequences of genomes and transcripts of pearl millet, garden asparagus, chickpea and Tartary buckwheat were downloaded from a public database. These transcripts were associated with functional annotations of their Arabidopsis thaliana and rice (Oryza sativa) counterparts identified by BLASTX. Conserved domains in protein sequences of those species were identified by the HMMER scan with the Pfam database. The resulting data was deposited in the figshare repository and can be browsed on the Terse Genomics Interface for Developing Botany (TGIF-DB) website (http://webpark2116.sakura.ne.jp/rlgpr/).

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Objective
Pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum) is a staple cereal crop for semi-arid regions. Its whole genome was sequenced and putative gene sequences were deduced [1]. Functions of some of the pearl millet genes have also been either examined by experiments or predicted on the basis of their homologies to specific, targeted gene sets with known functions ( [2,3]; for example). However, functional annotations of the pearl millet genes are neither sufficient nor systematic. Situations are similar in many other plant species such as garden asparagus (Asparagus officinalis), chickpea (Cicer arietinum) and Tartary buckwheat (Fagopyrum tataricum) [4-6 respectively, for analyses of their genomes]. Arabidopsis thaliana and rice (Oryza sativa) are dicot and monocot model species, respectively, and have better functional annotations for each gene ( [7,8]; for example). The objective of the data presented here was to improve the functional annotations of genes of pearl millet by systematic homology searches with databases for Arabidopsis genes, rice genes and protein conserved domains, to develop a platform for browsing the resulting data, and thereby to promote pearl millet genomics.

Data description
The whole genome sequences and transcript (or protein coding) sequences that were deduced from the genome sequences of pearl millet, garden asparagus, chickpea and Tartary buckwheat as well as genome annotation files in the general feature format (GFF) were downloaded from the International Pearl Millet Genome  Sequencing Consortium (IPMGSC) website [9], the Asparagus Genome Project website [10], the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) Chickpea Genome website (with Genome ID 2992) [11] and the MBKBASE Tartary Buckwheat Genome Project website [12], respectively. The sequences and functional annotations of Arabidopsis proteins (TAIR10 versions) were downloaded from The Arabidopsis Information Resource (TAIR) website [7], and those of rice (RGAP 7 versions) were downloaded from the Rice Genome Annotation Project (RGAP) website [8]. BLASTX on the BLAST + suite [13] was performed with the transcript sequences of those crop species as queries and with either the Arabidopsis protein sequences or rice protein sequences as the database. The threshold E-value was set as 1e − 20, which is more stringent than the default value (10.0), for this analysis. The transcripts (or genes) of the crop species were then associated with the functional annotations of the corresponding Arabidopsis and rice proteins identified by the BLASTX search. Protein sequences of pearl millet, garden asparagus, chickpea and Tartary buckwheat were deduced from their transcript sequences, and the Pfam database [14] was searched by the hmmscan program for HMMER (version 3.3) [15] to identify conserved domains in those proteins. The threshold E-value was set as 1e − 5, which is more stringent than the default value (10), for this analysis. A genomic locus sequence, which consists of exons and introns, and a promoter sequence, which is a 3-kb upstream sequence from the start codon, for each gene were extracted on the basis of the whole genome sequences and the GFF files. The resulting data for the gene sequences and their functional annotations for pearl millet, garden asparagus, chickpea and Tartary buckwheat were deposited in the figshare repository (Data sets 1-34 in Table 1) [16]. A website, Terse Genomics Interface for Developing Botany (TGIF-DB), was developed to browse these data [17] (see Data file 1 in Table 1 for a TGIF-DB interface). The programs in the BLAST+ suite [13] and the genome browser JBrowse [18] were included as a part of TGIF-DB.

Limitations
• Some proteins of the species used do not appear to have conserved domains and/or any close homolog in either Arabidopsis or rice. • Some pearl millet genes have been characterized by targeted analyses ( [2,3]; for example) but information about such analyses has not been included in the data set presented.
Abbreviation GFF: General feature format.