cazy_webscraper : local compilation and interrogation of comprehensive CAZyme datasets
Hobbs, Emma E. M. and Gloster, Tracey M. and Pritchard, Leighton (2023) cazy_webscraper : local compilation and interrogation of comprehensive CAZyme datasets. Microbial Genomics, 9 (8). 001086. ISSN 2057-5858 (https://doi.org/10.1099/mgen.0.001086)
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Abstract
Carbohydrate active enzymes (CAZymes) are pivotal in biological processes including energy metabolism, cell structure maintenance, signalling, and pathogen recognition. Bioinformatic prediction and mining of CAZymes improves our understanding of these activities and enables discovery of candidates of interest for industrial biotechnology, particularly the processing of organic waste for biofuel production. CAZy (www.cazy.org) is a high-quality, manually curated, and authoritative database of CAZymes that is often the starting point for these analyses. Automated querying and integration of CAZy data with other public datasets would constitute a powerful resource for mining and exploring CAZyme diversity. However, CAZy does not itself provide methods to automate queries, or integrate annotation data from other sources (except by following hyperlinks) to support further analysis. To overcome these limitations we developed cazy_webscraper, a command-line tool that retrieves data from CAZy and other online resources to build a local, shareable and reproducible database that augments and extends the authoritative CAZy database. cazy_webscraper’s integration of curated CAZyme annotations with their corresponding protein sequences, up-to-date taxonomy assignments, and protein structure data facilitates automated large-scale and targeted bioinformatic CAZyme family analysis and candidate screening. This tool has found widespread uptake in the community, with over 35 000 downloads (from April 2021 to June 2023). We demonstrate the use and application of cazy_webscraper to: (i) augment, update and correct CAZy database accessions; (ii) explore the taxonomic distribution of CAZymes recorded in CAZy, identifying under-represented taxa and unusual CAZy class distributions; and (iii) investigate three CAZymes having potential biotechnological application for degradation of biomass, but lacking a representative structure in the PDB database. We describe in general how cazy_webscraper facilitates functional, structural and evolutionary studies to aid identification of candidate enzymes for further characterization, and specifically note that CAZy provides supporting evidence for recent expansion of the Auxiliary Activities (AA) CAZy family in eukaryotes, consistent with functions potentially specific to eukaryotic lifestyles.
ORCID iDs
Hobbs, Emma E. M., Gloster, Tracey M. and Pritchard, Leighton ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8392-2822;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 86464 Dates: DateEvent14 August 2023Published23 July 2023Accepted8 May 2023SubmittedSubjects: Medicine > Pharmacy and materia medica Department: Faculty of Science > Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 15 Aug 2023 07:12 Last modified: 11 Nov 2024 13:43 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/86464