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The SEED and the Rapid Annotation of microbial genomes using Subsystems Technology (RAST)
Author(s) -
Ross Overbeek,
Robert Olson,
Gordon D. Pusch,
G J Olsen,
James J. Davis,
Terry Disz,
Robert A. Edwards,
Svetlana Gerdes,
Bruce Parrello,
Maulik Shukla,
Veronika Vonstein,
Alice R. Wattam,
Fangfang Xia,
Rick Stevens
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkt1226
Subject(s) - annotation , genome , biology , genome project , scripting language , gene annotation , computational biology , database , genomics , gene , computer science , genetics , programming language
In 2004, the SEED (http://pubseed.theseed.org/) was created to provide consistent and accurate genome annotations across thousands of genomes and as a platform for discovering and developing de novo annotations. The SEED is a constantly updated integration of genomic data with a genome database, web front end, API and server scripts. It is used by many scientists for predicting gene functions and discovering new pathways. In addition to being a powerful database for bioinformatics research, the SEED also houses subsystems (collections of functionally related protein families) and their derived FIGfams (protein families), which represent the core of the RAST annotation engine (http://rast.nmpdr.org/). When a new genome is submitted to RAST, genes are called and their annotations are made by comparison to the FIGfam collection. If the genome is made public, it is then housed within the SEED and its proteins populate the FIGfam collection. This annotation cycle has proven to be a robust and scalable solution to the problem of annotating the exponentially increasing number of genomes. To date, >12 000 users worldwide have annotated >60 000 distinct genomes using RAST. Here we describe the interconnectedness of the SEED database and RAST, the RAST annotation pipeline and updates to both resources.

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