Shared posts

03 Jan 04:45

shRNA-induced saturation of the microRNA pathway in the rat brain

by M A van Gestel

shRNA-induced saturation of the microRNA pathway in the rat brain

Gene Therapy advance online publication, January 2 2014. doi:10.1038/gt.2013.76

Authors: M A van Gestel, S van Erp, L E Sanders, M A D Brans, M C M Luijendijk, M Merkestein, R J Pasterkamp & R A H Adan

03 Jan 04:45

[Report] Genome-Scale CRISPR-Cas9 Knockout Screening in Human Cells

by Ophir Shalem
Genome-editing technology allows improved positive or negative selection screens. Authors: Ophir Shalem, Neville E. Sanjana, Ella Hartenian, Xi Shi, David A. Scott, Tarjei S. Mikkelsen, Dirk Heckl, Benjamin L. Ebert, David E. Root, John G. Doench, Feng Zhang
02 Jan 06:07

An in vivo control map for the eukaryotic mRNA translation machinery

by Helena Firczuk

Molecular Systems Biology 9, (2013). doi:10.1038/msb.2012.73

Authors: Helena Firczuk, Shichina Kannambath, Jürgen Pahle, Amy Claydon, Robert Beynon, John Duncan, Hans Westerhoff, Pedro Mendes & John EG McCarthy

02 Jan 06:03

Efficient translation initiation dictates codon usage at gene start

by Kajetan Bentele

Molecular Systems Biology 9, (2013). doi:10.1038/msb.2013.32

Authors: Kajetan Bentele, Paul Saffert, Robert Rauscher, Zoya Ignatova & Nils Blüthgen

02 Jan 06:03

In vitro integration of ribosomal RNA synthesis, ribosome assembly, and translation

by Michael C Jewett

Molecular Systems Biology 9, (2013). doi:10.1038/msb.2013.31

Authors: Michael C Jewett, Brian R Fritz, Laura E Timmerman & George M Church

02 Jan 06:02

Imaging the transcriptome

by Timothée Lionnet

Molecular Systems Biology 9, (2013). doi:10.1038/msb.2013.67

Author: Timothée Lionnet

02 Jan 05:28

TALEN-based knockout library for human microRNAs

by Young-Kook Kim

Nature Structural & Molecular Biology 20, 1458 (2013). doi:10.1038/nsmb.2701

Authors: Young-Kook Kim, Gabbine Wee, Joha Park, Jongkyu Kim, Daehyun Baek, Jin-Soo Kim & V Narry Kim

02 Jan 05:27

The human cap-binding complex is functionally connected to the nuclear RNA exosome

by Peter Refsing Andersen

Nature Structural & Molecular Biology 20, 1367 (2013). doi:10.1038/nsmb.2703

Authors: Peter Refsing Andersen, Michal Domanski, Maiken S Kristiansen, Helena Storvall, Evgenia Ntini, Celine Verheggen, Aleks Schein, Jakob Bunkenborg, Ina Poser, Marie Hallais, Rickard Sandberg, Anthony Hyman, John LaCava, Michael P Rout, Jens S Andersen, Edouard Bertrand & Torben Heick Jensen

02 Jan 05:27

CBC–ARS2 stimulates 3′-end maturation of multiple RNA families and favors cap-proximal processing

by Marie Hallais

Nature Structural & Molecular Biology 20, 1358 (2013). doi:10.1038/nsmb.2720

Authors: Marie Hallais, Frédéric Pontvianne, Peter Refsing Andersen, Marcello Clerici, Daniela Lener, Nour El Houda Benbahouche, Thierry Gostan, Franck Vandermoere, Marie-Cécile Robert, Stephen Cusack, Céline Verheggen, Torben Heick Jensen & Edouard Bertrand

02 Jan 05:26

Poly-combing the genome for RNA

by Loyal A Goff

Nature Structural & Molecular Biology 20, 1344 (2013). doi:10.1038/nsmb.2728

Authors: Loyal A Goff & John L Rinn

An unresolved question in mammalian epigenetic regulation is how ubiquitously expressed chromatin-modifying complexes such as Polycomb group complex 2 (PRC2) find their specific target sites across an intricate choreography of localization events in time and space. Two recent studies now provide critical new insights into an intriguing genome-wide role for RNA in PRC2 regulation.

02 Jan 05:16

Structural biology: The in vivo RNA structurome

by Allison Doerr

Nature Methods 11, 11 (2014). doi:10.1038/nmeth.2799

Author: Allison Doerr

Genome-wide, in vivo RNA structure probing helps reveal how RNA structure regulates gene expression.

02 Jan 05:15

CRISPRs and epigenome editing

by Nicole Rusk

Nature Methods 11, 28 (2014). doi:10.1038/nmeth.2775

Author: Nicole Rusk

Precise alterations to the epigenome with targeted enzymes.

02 Jan 05:14

Genetics: TALENs knock out human microRNAs

Nature Methods 11, 10 (2014). doi:10.1038/nmeth.2792

02 Jan 05:12

Entering the era of single-cell transcriptomics in biology and medicine

by Rickard Sandberg

Nature Methods 11, 22 (2014). doi:10.1038/nmeth.2764

Author: Rickard Sandberg

Recent technical advances have enabled RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) in single cells. Exploratory studies have already led to insights into the dynamics of differentiation, cellular responses to stimulation and the stochastic nature of transcription. We are entering an era of single-cell transcriptomics that holds promise to substantially impact biology and medicine.

02 Jan 05:09

Computational and Genetic Reduction of a Cell Cycle to Its Simplest, Primordial Components

by Seán M. Murray et al.

by Seán M. Murray, Gaël Panis, Coralie Fumeaux, Patrick H. Viollier, Martin Howard

What are the minimal requirements to sustain an asymmetric cell cycle? Here we use mathematical modelling and forward genetics to reduce an asymmetric cell cycle to its simplest, primordial components. In the Alphaproteobacterium Caulobacter crescentus, cell cycle progression is believed to be controlled by a cyclical genetic circuit comprising four essential master regulators. Unexpectedly, our in silico modelling predicted that one of these regulators, GcrA, is in fact dispensable. We confirmed this experimentally, finding that ΔgcrA cells are viable, but slow-growing and elongated, with the latter mostly due to an insufficiency of a key cell division protein. Furthermore, suppressor analysis showed that another cell cycle regulator, the methyltransferase CcrM, is similarly dispensable with simultaneous gcrA/ccrM disruption ameliorating the cytokinetic and growth defect of ΔgcrA cells. Within the Alphaproteobacteria, gcrA and ccrM are consistently present or absent together, rather than either gene being present alone, suggesting that gcrA/ccrM constitutes an independent, dispensable genetic module. Together our approaches unveil the essential elements of a primordial asymmetric cell cycle that should help illuminate more complex cell cycles.
02 Jan 05:09

Notes from the Cell Cycle World: Less Is More

by Mary Hoff

by Mary Hoff

02 Jan 05:06

Translational reprogramming in cellular stress response.

by Liu B, Qian SB
Related Articles

Translational reprogramming in cellular stress response.

Wiley Interdiscip Rev RNA. 2013 Dec 23;

Authors: Liu B, Qian SB

Abstract
Cell survival in changing environments requires appropriate regulation of gene expression, including translational control. Multiple stress signaling pathways converge on several key translation factors, such as eIF4F and eIF2, and rapidly modulate messenger RNA (mRNA) translation at both the initiation and the elongation stages. Repression of global protein synthesis is often accompanied with selective translation of mRNAs encoding proteins that are vital for cell survival and stress recovery. The past decade has seen significant progress in our understanding of translational reprogramming in part due to the development of technologies that allow the dissection of the interplay between mRNA elements and corresponding binding proteins. Recent genome-wide studies using ribosome profiling have revealed unprecedented proteome complexity and flexibility through alternative translation, raising intriguing questions about stress-induced translational reprogramming. Many surprises emerged from these studies, including wide-spread alternative translation initiation, ribosome pausing during elongation, and reversible modification of mRNAs. Elucidation of the regulatory mechanisms underlying translational reprogramming will ultimately lead to the development of novel therapeutic strategies for human diseases. For further resources related to this article, please visit the WIREs website. Conflict of interest: The authors have declared no conflicts of interest for this article.

PMID: 24375939 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

02 Jan 05:05

Induction of amphiregulin by p53 promotes apoptosis via control of microRNA biogenesis in response to DNA damage.

by Taira N, Yamaguchi T, Kimura J, Lu ZG, Fukuda S, Higashiyama S, Ono M, Yoshida K
Related Articles

Induction of amphiregulin by p53 promotes apoptosis via control of microRNA biogenesis in response to DNA damage.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2014 Jan 14;111(2):717-22

Authors: Taira N, Yamaguchi T, Kimura J, Lu ZG, Fukuda S, Higashiyama S, Ono M, Yoshida K

Abstract
Upon DNA damage, tumor suppressor p53 determines cell fate by repairing DNA lesions to survive or by inducing apoptosis to eliminate damaged cells. The decision is based on its posttranslational modifications. Especially, p53 phosphorylation at Ser46 exerts apoptotic cell death. However, little is known about the precise mechanism of p53 phosphorylation on the induction of apoptosis. Here, we show that amphiregulin (AREG) is identified for a direct target of Ser46 phosphorylation via the comprehensive expression analyses. Ser46-phosphorylated p53 selectively binds to the promoter region of AREG gene, indicating that the p53 modification changes target genes by altering its binding affinity to the promoter. Although AREG belongs to a family of the epidermal growth factor, it also emerges in the nucleus under DNA damage. To clarify nuclear function of AREG, we analyze AREG-binding proteins by mass spectrometry. AREG interacts with DEAD-box RNA helicase p68 (DDX5). Intriguingly, AREG regulates precursor microRNA processing (i.e., miR-15a) with DDX5 to reduce the expression of antiapoptotic protein Bcl-2. These findings collectively support a mechanism in which the induction of AREG by Ser46-phosphorylated p53 is required for the microRNA biogenesis in the apoptotic response to DNA damage.

PMID: 24379358 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

02 Jan 05:04

Characterizing the genetic basis of transcriptome diversity through RNA-sequencing of 922 individuals [RESEARCH]

by Battle, A., Mostafavi, S., Zhu, X., Potash, J. B., Weissman, M. M., McCormick, C., Haudenschild, C. D., Beckman, K. B., Shi, J., Mei, R., Urban, A. E., Montgomery, S. B., Levinson, D. F., Koller, D.

Understanding the consequences of regulatory variation in the human genome remains a major challenge, with important implications for understanding gene regulation and interpreting the many disease-risk variants that fall outside of protein-coding regions. Here, we provide a direct window into the regulatory consequences of genetic variation by sequencing RNA from 922 genotyped individuals. We present a comprehensive description of the distribution of regulatory variation—by the specific expression phenotypes altered, the properties of affected genes, and the genomic characteristics of regulatory variants. We detect variants influencing expression of over ten thousand genes, and through the enhanced resolution offered by RNA-sequencing, for the first time we identify thousands of variants associated with specific phenotypes including splicing and allelic expression. Evaluating the effects of both long-range intra-chromosomal and trans (cross-chromosomal) regulation, we observe modularity in the regulatory network, with three-dimensional chromosomal configuration playing a particular role in regulatory modules within each chromosome. We also observe a significant depletion of regulatory variants affecting central and critical genes, along with a trend of reduced effect sizes as variant frequency increases, providing evidence that purifying selection and buffering have limited the deleterious impact of regulatory variation on the cell. Further, generalizing beyond observed variants, we have analyzed the genomic properties of variants associated with expression and splicing and developed a Bayesian model to predict regulatory consequences of genetic variants, applicable to the interpretation of individual genomes and disease studies. Together, these results represent a critical step toward characterizing the complete landscape of human regulatory variation.

02 Jan 05:04

Analysis of off-target effects of CRISPR/Cas-derived RNA-guided endonucleases and nickases [METHOD]

by Cho, S. W., Kim, S., Kim, Y., Kweon, J., Kim, H. S., Bae, S., Kim, J.-S.

RNA-guided endonucleases (RGENs), derived from the prokaryotic adaptive immune system known as CRISPR/Cas, enable targeted genome engineering in cells and organisms. RGENs are ribonucleoproteins that consist of guide RNA and Cas9, a protein component originated from Streptococcus pyogenes. These enzymes cleave chromosomal DNA, whose sequence is complementary, to guide RNA in a targeted manner, producing site-specific DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), the repair of which gives rise to targeted genome modifications. Despite broad interest in RGEN-mediated genome editing, these nucleases are limited by off-target mutations and unwanted chromosomal translocations associated with off-target DNA cleavages. Here, we show that off-target effects of RGENs can be reduced below the detection limits of deep sequencing by choosing unique target sequences in the genome and modifying both guide RNA and Cas9. We found that both the composition and structure of guide RNA can affect RGEN activities in cells to reduce off-target effects. RGENs efficiently discriminated on-target sites from off-target sites that differ by two bases. Furthermore, exome sequencing analysis showed that no off-target mutations were induced by two RGENs in four clonal populations of mutant cells. In addition, paired Cas9 nickases, composed of D10A Cas9 and guide RNA, which generate two single-strand breaks (SSBs) or nicks on different DNA strands, were highly specific in human cells, avoiding off-target mutations without sacrificing genome-editing efficiency. Interestingly, paired nickases induced chromosomal deletions in a targeted manner without causing unwanted translocations. Our results highlight the importance of choosing unique target sequences and optimizing guide RNA and Cas9 to avoid or reduce RGEN-induced off-target mutations.

02 Jan 05:03

Highly efficient CRISPR/Cas9-mediated knock-in in zebrafish by homology-independent DNA repair [METHOD]

by Auer, T. O., Duroure, K., De Cian, A., Concordet, J.-P., Del Bene, F.

Sequence-specific nucleases like TALENs and the CRISPR/Cas9 system have greatly expanded the genome editing possibilities in model organisms such as zebrafish. Both systems have recently been used to create knock-out alleles with great efficiency, and TALENs have also been successfully employed in knock-in of DNA cassettes at defined loci via homologous recombination (HR). Here we report CRISPR/Cas9-mediated knock-in of DNA cassettes into the zebrafish genome at a very high rate by homology-independent double-strand break (DSB) repair pathways. After co-injection of a donor plasmid with a short guide RNA (sgRNA) and Cas9 nuclease mRNA, concurrent cleavage of donor plasmid DNA and the selected chromosomal integration site resulted in efficient targeted integration of donor DNA. We successfully employed this approach to convert eGFP into Gal4 transgenic lines, and the same plasmids and sgRNAs can be applied in any species where eGFP lines were generated as part of enhancer and gene trap screens. In addition, we show the possibility of easily targeting DNA integration at endogenous loci, thus greatly facilitating the creation of reporter and loss-of-function alleles. Due to its simplicity, flexibility, and very high efficiency, our method greatly expands the repertoire for genome editing in zebrafish and can be readily adapted to many other organisms.

02 Jan 05:03

Small RNA profiling of Xenopus embryos reveals novel miRNAs and a new class of small RNAs derived from intronic transposable elements [RESEARCH]

by Harding, J. L., Horswell, S., Heliot, C., Armisen, J., Zimmerman, L. B., Luscombe, N. M., Miska, E. A., Hill, C. S.

Small RNA control of gene expression is critical for developmental processes in vertebrate embryos. To determine the dynamics of small RNA expression and to uncover novel small RNAs in the early vertebrate embryo, we performed high-throughput sequencing of all small RNAs in Xenopus tropicalis embryos at three developmental time points and in dissected halves of gastrula embryos. This analysis allowed us to identify novel microRNAs and we show that microRNA expression is highly dynamic and spatially localized in early embryos. In addition, we have developed a microRNA prediction pipeline and demonstrate that it has the power to predict new miRNAs that are experimentally detectable in frogs, mice, and humans. By combining the small RNA sequencing with mRNA profiling at the different developmental stages, we identify a new class of small noncoding RNAs that we name siteRNAs, which align in clusters to introns of protein-coding genes. We show that siteRNAs are derived from remnants of transposable elements present in the introns. We find that genes containing clusters of siteRNAs are transcriptionally repressed as compared with all genes. Furthermore, we show that this is true for individual genes containing siteRNA clusters, and that these genes are enriched in specific repressive histone modifications. Our data thus suggest a new mechanism of siteRNA-mediated gene silencing in vertebrates, and provide an example of how mobile elements can affect gene regulation.

02 Jan 05:02

Highly efficient gene knockout in mice and zebrafish with RNA-guided endonucleases [METHOD]

by Sung, Y. H., Kim, J. M., Kim, H.-T., Lee, J., Jeon, J., Jin, Y., Choi, J.-H., Ban, Y. H., Ha, S.-J., Kim, C.-H., Lee, H.-W., Kim, J.-S.

RNA-guided endonucleases (RGENs), derived from the prokaryotic Type II CRISPR-Cas system, enable targeted genome modification in cells and organisms. Here we describe the establishment of gene-knockout mice and zebrafish by the injection of RGENs as Cas9 protein:guide RNA complexes or Cas9 mRNA plus guide RNA into one-cell-stage embryos of both species. RGENs efficiently generated germline transmittable mutations in up to 93% of newborn mice with minimal toxicity. RGEN-induced mutations in the mouse Prkdc gene that encodes an enzyme critical for DNA double-strand break repair resulted in immunodeficiency both in F0 and F1 mice. We propose that RGEN-mediated mutagenesis in animals will greatly expedite the creation of genetically engineered model organisms, accelerating functional genomic research.

31 Dec 09:17

Aprataxin resolves adenylated RNA–DNA junctions to maintain genome integrity

by Percy Tumbale

Nature advance online publication 22 December 2013. doi:10.1038/nature12824

Authors: Percy Tumbale, Jessica S. Williams, Matthew J. Schellenberg, Thomas A. Kunkel & R. Scott Williams

Faithful maintenance and propagation of eukaryotic genomes is ensured by three-step DNA ligation reactions used by ATP-dependent DNA ligases. Paradoxically, when DNA ligases encounter nicked DNA structures with abnormal DNA termini, DNA ligase catalytic activity can generate and/or exacerbate DNA damage through abortive ligation that produces chemically adducted, toxic 5′-adenylated (5′-AMP) DNA lesions. Aprataxin (APTX) reverses DNA adenylation but the context for deadenylation repair is unclear. Here we examine the importance of APTX to RNase-H2-dependent excision repair (RER) of a lesion that is very frequently introduced into DNA, a ribonucleotide. We show that ligases generate adenylated 5′ ends containing a ribose characteristic of RNase H2 incision. APTX efficiently repairs adenylated RNA–DNA, and acting in an RNA–DNA damage response (RDDR), promotes cellular survival and prevents S-phase checkpoint activation in budding yeast undergoing RER. Structure–function studies of human APTX–RNA–DNA–AMP–Zn complexes define a mechanism for detecting and reversing adenylation at RNA–DNA junctions. This involves A-form RNA binding, proper protein folding and conformational changes, all of which are affected by heritable APTX mutations in ataxia with oculomotor apraxia 1. Together, these results indicate that accumulation of adenylated RNA–DNA may contribute to neurological disease.

30 Dec 01:47

uORFdb--a comprehensive literature database on eukaryotic uORF biology

by Wethmar, K., Barbosa-Silva, A., Andrade-Navarro, M. A., Leutz, A.

Approximately half of all human transcripts contain at least one upstream translational initiation site that precedes the main coding sequence (CDS) and gives rise to an upstream open reading frame (uORF). We generated uORFdb, publicly available at http://cbdm.mdc-berlin.de/tools/uorfdb, to serve as a comprehensive literature database on eukaryotic uORF biology. Upstream ORFs affect downstream translation by interfering with the unrestrained progression of ribosomes across the transcript leader sequence. Although the first uORF-related translational activity was observed >30 years ago, and an increasing number of studies link defective uORF-mediated translational control to the development of human diseases, the features that determine uORF-mediated regulation of downstream translation are not well understood. The uORFdb was manually curated from all uORF-related literature listed at the PubMed database. It categorizes individual publications by a variety of denominators including taxon, gene and type of study. Furthermore, the database can be filtered for multiple structural and functional uORF-related properties to allow convenient and targeted access to the complex field of eukaryotic uORF biology.

30 Dec 01:47

NONCODEv4: exploring the world of long non-coding RNA genes

by Xie, C., Yuan, J., Li, H., Li, M., Zhao, G., Bu, D., Zhu, W., Wu, W., Chen, R., Zhao, Y.
30 Dec 01:47

SMMRNA: a database of small molecule modulators of RNA

by Mehta, A., Sonam, S., Gouri, I., Loharch, S., Sharma, D. K., Parkesh, R.

We have developed SMMRNA, an interactive database, available at http://www.smmrna.org, with special focus on small molecule ligands targeting RNA. Currently, SMMRNA consists of ~770 unique ligands along with structural images of RNA molecules. Each ligand in the SMMRNA contains information such as Kd, Ki, IC50, Tm, molecular weight (MW), hydrogen donor and acceptor count, XlogP, number of rotatable bonds, number of aromatic rings and 2D and 3D structures. These parameters can be explored using text search, advanced search, substructure and similarity-based analysis tools that are embedded in SMMRNA. A structure editor is provided for 3D visualization of ligands. Advance analysis can be performed using substructure and OpenBabel-based chemical similarity fingerprints. Upload facility for both RNA and ligands is also provided. The physicochemical properties of the ligands were further examined using OpenBabel descriptors, hierarchical clustering, binning partition and multidimensional scaling. We have also generated a 3D conformation database of ligands to support the structure and ligand-based screening. SMMRNA provides comprehensive resource for further design, development and refinement of small molecule modulators for selective targeting of RNA molecules.

30 Dec 01:46

starBase v2.0: decoding miRNA-ceRNA, miRNA-ncRNA and protein-RNA interaction networks from large-scale CLIP-Seq data

by Li, J.-H., Liu, S., Zhou, H., Qu, L.-H., Yang, J.-H.

Although microRNAs (miRNAs), other non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) (e.g. lncRNAs, pseudogenes and circRNAs) and competing endogenous RNAs (ceRNAs) have been implicated in cell-fate determination and in various human diseases, surprisingly little is known about the regulatory interaction networks among the multiple classes of RNAs. In this study, we developed starBase v2.0 (http://starbase.sysu.edu.cn/) to systematically identify the RNA–RNA and protein–RNA interaction networks from 108 CLIP-Seq (PAR-CLIP, HITS-CLIP, iCLIP, CLASH) data sets generated by 37 independent studies. By analyzing millions of RNA-binding protein binding sites, we identified ~9000 miRNA-circRNA, 16 000 miRNA-pseudogene and 285 000 protein–RNA regulatory relationships. Moreover, starBase v2.0 has been updated to provide the most comprehensive CLIP-Seq experimentally supported miRNA-mRNA and miRNA-lncRNA interaction networks to date. We identified ~10 000 ceRNA pairs from CLIP-supported miRNA target sites. By combining 13 functional genomic annotations, we developed miRFunction and ceRNAFunction web servers to predict the function of miRNAs and other ncRNAs from the miRNA-mediated regulatory networks. Finally, we developed interactive web implementations to provide visualization, analysis and downloading of the aforementioned large-scale data sets. This study will greatly expand our understanding of ncRNA functions and their coordinated regulatory networks.

30 Dec 01:46

miRTarBase update 2014: an information resource for experimentally validated miRNA-target interactions

by Hsu, S.-D., Tseng, Y.-T., Shrestha, S., Lin, Y.-L., Khaleel, A., Chou, C.-H., Chu, C.-F., Huang, H.-Y., Lin, C.-M., Ho, S.-Y., Jian, T.-Y., Lin, F.-M., Chang, T.-H., Weng, S.-L., Liao, K.-W., Liao, I.-E., Liu, C.-C., Huang, H.-D.

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small non-coding RNA molecules capable of negatively regulating gene expression to control many cellular mechanisms. The miRTarBase database (http://mirtarbase.mbc.nctu.edu.tw/) provides the most current and comprehensive information of experimentally validated miRNA-target interactions. The database was launched in 2010 with data sources for >100 published studies in the identification of miRNA targets, molecular networks of miRNA targets and systems biology, and the current release (2013, version 4) includes significant expansions and enhancements over the initial release (2010, version 1). This article reports the current status of and recent improvements to the database, including (i) a 14-fold increase to miRNA-target interaction entries, (ii) a miRNA-target network, (iii) expression profile of miRNA and its target gene, (iv) miRNA target-associated diseases and (v) additional utilities including an upgrade reminder and an error reporting/user feedback system.

30 Dec 01:38

Ribosomal Database Project: data and tools for high throughput rRNA analysis

by Cole, J. R., Wang, Q., Fish, J. A., Chai, B., McGarrell, D. M., Sun, Y., Brown, C. T., Porras-Alfaro, A., Kuske, C. R., Tiedje, J. M.

Ribosomal Database Project (RDP; http://rdp.cme.msu.edu/) provides the research community with aligned and annotated rRNA gene sequence data, along with tools to allow researchers to analyze their own rRNA gene sequences in the RDP framework. RDP data and tools are utilized in fields as diverse as human health, microbial ecology, environmental microbiology, nucleic acid chemistry, taxonomy and phylogenetics. In addition to aligned and annotated collections of bacterial and archaeal small subunit rRNA genes, RDP now includes a collection of fungal large subunit rRNA genes. RDP tools, including Classifier and Aligner, have been updated to work with this new fungal collection. The use of high-throughput sequencing to characterize environmental microbial populations has exploded in the past several years, and as sequence technologies have improved, the sizes of environmental datasets have increased. With release 11, RDP is providing an expanded set of tools to facilitate analysis of high-throughput data, including both single-stranded and paired-end reads. In addition, most tools are now available as open source packages for download and local use by researchers with high-volume needs or who would like to develop custom analysis pipelines.