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Dive into the research topics where Brigitte Boeckmann is active.

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Featured researches published by Brigitte Boeckmann.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2003

The SWISS-PROT protein knowledgebase and its supplement TrEMBL in 2003

Brigitte Boeckmann; Amos Marc Bairoch; Rolf Apweiler; Marie-Claude Blatter; Anne Estreicher; Elisabeth Gasteiger; María Martín; Karine Michoud; Claire O'Donovan; Isabelle Phan; Sandrine Pilbout; Michel Schneider

The SWISS-PROT protein knowledgebase (http://www.expasy.org/sprot/ and http://www.ebi.ac.uk/swissprot/) connects amino acid sequences with the current knowledge in the Life Sciences. Each protein entry provides an interdisciplinary overview of relevant information by bringing together experimental results, computed features and sometimes even contradictory conclusions. Detailed expertise that goes beyond the scope of SWISS-PROT is made available via direct links to specialised databases. SWISS-PROT provides annotated entries for all species, but concentrates on the annotation of entries from human (the HPI project) and other model organisms to ensure the presence of high quality annotation for representative members of all protein families. Part of the annotation can be transferred to other family members, as is already done for microbes by the High-quality Automated and Manual Annotation of microbial Proteomes (HAMAP) project. Protein families and groups of proteins are regularly reviewed to keep up with current scientific findings. Complementarily, TrEMBL strives to comprise all protein sequences that are not yet represented in SWISS-PROT, by incorporating a perpetually increasing level of mostly automated annotation. Researchers are welcome to contribute their knowledge to the scientific community by submitting relevant findings to SWISS-PROT at [email protected].


Nucleic Acids Research | 2004

UniProt: the Universal Protein knowledgebase

Rolf Apweiler; Amos Marc Bairoch; Cathy H. Wu; Winona C. Barker; Brigitte Boeckmann; Serenella Ferro; Elisabeth Gasteiger; Hongzhan Huang; Rodrigo Lopez; Michele Magrane; María Martín; Darren A. Natale; Claire O’Donovan; Nicole Redaschi; Lai-Su L. Yeh

To provide the scientific community with a single, centralized, authoritative resource for protein sequences and functional information, the Swiss-Prot, TrEMBL and PIR protein database activities have united to form the Universal Protein Knowledgebase (UniProt) consortium. Our mission is to provide a comprehensive, fully classified, richly and accurately annotated protein sequence knowledgebase, with extensive cross-references and query interfaces. The central database will have two sections, corresponding to the familiar Swiss-Prot (fully manually curated entries) and TrEMBL (enriched with automated classification, annotation and extensive cross-references). For convenient sequence searches, UniProt also provides several non-redundant sequence databases. The UniProt NREF (UniRef) databases provide representative subsets of the knowledgebase suitable for efficient searching. The comprehensive UniProt Archive (UniParc) is updated daily from many public source databases. The UniProt databases can be accessed online (http://www.uniprot.org) or downloaded in several formats (ftp://ftp.uniprot.org/pub). The scientific community is encouraged to submit data for inclusion in UniProt.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2006

The Universal Protein Resource (UniProt): an expanding universe of protein information

Cathy H. Wu; Rolf Apweiler; Amos Marc Bairoch; Darren A. Natale; Winona C. Barker; Brigitte Boeckmann; Serenella Ferro; Elisabeth Gasteiger; Hongzhan Huang; Rodrigo Lopez; Michele Magrane; María Martín; Raja Mazumder; Claire O'Donovan; Nicole Redaschi; Baris E. Suzek

The Universal Protein Resource (UniProt) provides a central resource on protein sequences and functional annotation with three database components, each addressing a key need in protein bioinformatics. The UniProt Knowledgebase (UniProtKB), comprising the manually annotated UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot section and the automatically annotated UniProtKB/TrEMBL section, is the preeminent storehouse of protein annotation. The extensive cross-references, functional and feature annotations and literature-based evidence attribution enable scientists to analyse proteins and query across databases. The UniProt Reference Clusters (UniRef) speed similarity searches via sequence space compression by merging sequences that are 100% (UniRef100), 90% (UniRef90) or 50% (UniRef50) identical. Finally, the UniProt Archive (UniParc) stores all publicly available protein sequences, containing the history of sequence data with links to the source databases. UniProt databases continue to grow in size and in availability of information. Recent and upcoming changes to database contents, formats, controlled vocabularies and services are described. New download availability includes all major releases of UniProtKB, sequence collections by taxonomic division and complete proteomes. A bibliography mapping service has been added, and an ID mapping service will be available soon. UniProt databases can be accessed online at or downloaded at .


Nucleic Acids Research | 1993

The SWISS-PROT protein sequence data bank, recent developments

Amos Marc Bairoch; Brigitte Boeckmann

SWISS-PROT [1] is an annotated protein sequence database established in 1986 and maintained collaboratively, since 1988, by the Department of Medical Biochemistry of the University of Geneva and the EMBL Data Library [2]. The SWISS-PROT protein sequence data bank consist of sequence entries. Sequence entries are composed of different lines types, each with their own format. For standardization purposes the format of SWISS-PROT [3] follows as closely as possible that of the EMBL Nucleotide Sequence Database. A sample SWISS-PROT entry is shown in Figure 1. The SWISS-PROT database distinguishes itself from other protein sequence databases by three distinct criteria:


Bioinformatics | 2012

Toward community standards in the quest for orthologs

Christophe Dessimoz; Toni Gabaldón; David S. Roos; Erik L. L. Sonnhammer; Javier Herrero; Adrian M. Altenhoff; Rolf Apweiler; Michael Ashburner; Judith A. Blake; Brigitte Boeckmann; Alan Bridge; Elspeth Bruford; Mike Cherry; Matthieu Conte; Durand Dannie; Ruchira S. Datta; Jean-Baka Domelevo Entfellner; Ingo Ebersberger; Michael Y. Galperin; Jacob M. Joseph; Tina Koestler; Evgenia V. Kriventseva; Odile Lecompte; Jack Leunissen; Suzanna E. Lewis; Benjamin Linard; Michael S. Livstone; Hui-Chun Lu; María Martín; Raja Mazumder

The identification of orthologs—genes pairs descended from a common ancestor through speciation, rather than duplication—has emerged as an essential component of many bioinformatics applications, ranging from the annotation of new genomes to experimental target prioritization. Yet, the development and application of orthology inference methods is hampered by the lack of consensus on source proteomes, file formats and benchmarks. The second ‘Quest for Orthologs’ meeting brought together stakeholders from various communities to address these challenges. We report on achievements and outcomes of this meeting, focusing on topics of particular relevance to the research community at large. The Quest for Orthologs consortium is an open community that welcomes contributions from all researchers interested in orthology research and applications. Contact: [email protected]


Bioinformatics | 2014

Big data and other challenges in the quest for orthologs

Erik L. L. Sonnhammer; Toni Gabaldón; Alan Wilter Sousa da Silva; María Martín; Marc Robinson-Rechavi; Brigitte Boeckmann; Paul D. Thomas; Christophe Dessimoz

Given the rapid increase of species with a sequenced genome, the need to identify orthologous genes between them has emerged as a central bioinformatics task. Many different methods exist for orthology detection, which makes it difficult to decide which one to choose for a particular application. Here, we review the latest developments and issues in the orthology field, and summarize the most recent results reported at the third ‘Quest for Orthologs’ meeting. We focus on community efforts such as the adoption of reference proteomes, standard file formats and benchmarking. Progress in these areas is good, and they are already beneficial to both orthology consumers and providers. However, a major current issue is that the massive increase in complete proteomes poses computational challenges to many of the ortholog database providers, as most orthology inference algorithms scale at least quadratically with the number of proteomes. The Quest for Orthologs consortium is an open community with a number of working groups that join efforts to enhance various aspects of orthology analysis, such as defining standard formats and datasets, documenting community resources and benchmarking. Availability and implementation: All such materials are available at http://questfororthologs.org. Contact: [email protected] or [email protected]


Nature Methods | 2016

Standardized benchmarking in the quest for orthologs

Adrian M. Altenhoff; Brigitte Boeckmann; Salvador Capella-Gutiérrez; Daniel A. Dalquen; Todd DeLuca; Kristoffer Forslund; Jaime Huerta-Cepas; Benjamin Linard; Cecile Pereira; Leszek P. Pryszcz; Fabian Schreiber; Alan Wilter Sousa da Silva; Damian Szklarczyk; Clément-Marie Train; Peer Bork; Odile Lecompte; Christian von Mering; Ioannis Xenarios; Kimmen Sjölander; Lars Juhl Jensen; María Martín; Matthieu Muffato; Toni Gabaldón; Suzanna E. Lewis; Paul D. Thomas; Erik L. L. Sonnhammer; Christophe Dessimoz

Achieving high accuracy in orthology inference is essential for many comparative, evolutionary and functional genomic analyses, yet the true evolutionary history of genes is generally unknown and orthologs are used for very different applications across phyla, requiring different precision–recall trade-offs. As a result, it is difficult to assess the performance of orthology inference methods. Here, we present a community effort to establish standards and an automated web-based service to facilitate orthology benchmarking. Using this service, we characterize 15 well-established inference methods and resources on a battery of 20 different benchmarks. Standardized benchmarking provides a way for users to identify the most effective methods for the problem at hand, sets a minimum requirement for new tools and resources, and guides the development of more accurate orthology inference methods.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2006

Detecting non-orthology in the COGs database and other approaches grouping orthologs using genome-specific best hits

Christophe Dessimoz; Brigitte Boeckmann; Alexander Roth; Gaston H. Gonnet

Correct orthology assignment is a critical prerequisite of numerous comparative genomics procedures, such as function prediction, construction of phylogenetic species trees and genome rearrangement analysis. We present an algorithm for the detection of non-orthologs that arise by mistake in current orthology classification methods based on genome-specific best hits, such as the COGs database. The algorithm works with pairwise distance estimates, rather than computationally expensive and error-prone tree-building methods. The accuracy of the algorithm is evaluated through verification of the distribution of predicted cases, case-by-case phylogenetic analysis and comparisons with predictions from other projects using independent methods. Our results show that a very significant fraction of the COG groups include non-orthologs: using conservative parameters, the algorithm detects non-orthology in a third of all COG groups. Consequently, sequence analysis sensitive to correct orthology assignments will greatly benefit from these findings.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Evolution of the ferric reductase domain (FRD) superfamily: modularity, functional diversification, and signature motifs

Xuezhi Zhang; Karl-Heinz Krause; Ioannis Xenarios; Thierry Soldati; Brigitte Boeckmann

A heme-containing transmembrane ferric reductase domain (FRD) is found in bacterial and eukaryotic protein families, including ferric reductases (FRE), and NADPH oxidases (NOX). The aim of this study was to understand the phylogeny of the FRD superfamily. Bacteria contain FRD proteins consisting only of the ferric reductase domain, such as YedZ and short bFRE proteins. Full length FRE and NOX enzymes are mostly found in eukaryotic cells and all possess a dehydrogenase domain, allowing them to catalyze electron transfer from cytosolic NADPH to extracellular metal ions (FRE) or oxygen (NOX). Metazoa possess YedZ-related STEAP proteins, possibly derived from bacteria through horizontal gene transfer. Phylogenetic analyses suggests that FRE enzymes appeared early in evolution, followed by a transition towards EF-hand containing NOX enzymes (NOX5- and DUOX-like). An ancestral gene of the NOX(1-4) family probably lost the EF-hands and new regulatory mechanisms of increasing complexity evolved in this clade. Two signature motifs were identified: NOX enzymes are distinguished from FRE enzymes through a four amino acid motif spanning from transmembrane domain 3 (TM3) to TM4, and YedZ/STEAP proteins are identified by the replacement of the first canonical heme-spanning histidine by a highly conserved arginine. The FRD superfamily most likely originated in bacteria.


Plant Physiology | 2014

Functional and evolutionary analysis of the CASPARIAN STRIP MEMBRANE DOMAIN PROTEIN family

Daniele Roppolo; Brigitte Boeckmann; Alexandre Pfister; Emmanuel Boutet; Maria Carmen Rubio; Valérie Dénervaud-Tendon; Joop E. M. Vermeer; Jacqueline Gheyselinck; Ioannis Xenarios; Niko Geldner

Casparian strip membrane proteins are potentially involved in the generation of plasma membrane domains and the modification of cell walls. CASPARIAN STRIP MEMBRANE DOMAIN PROTEINS (CASPs) are four-membrane-span proteins that mediate the deposition of Casparian strips in the endodermis by recruiting the lignin polymerization machinery. CASPs show high stability in their membrane domain, which presents all the hallmarks of a membrane scaffold. Here, we characterized the large family of CASP-like (CASPL) proteins. CASPLs were found in all major divisions of land plants as well as in green algae; homologs outside of the plant kingdom were identified as members of the MARVEL protein family. When ectopically expressed in the endodermis, most CASPLs were able to integrate the CASP membrane domain, which suggests that CASPLs share with CASPs the propensity to form transmembrane scaffolds. Extracellular loops are not necessary for generating the scaffold, since CASP1 was still able to localize correctly when either one of the extracellular loops was deleted. The CASP first extracellular loop was found conserved in euphyllophytes but absent in plants lacking Casparian strips, an observation that may contribute to the study of Casparian strip and root evolution. In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), CASPL showed specific expression in a variety of cell types, such as trichomes, abscission zone cells, peripheral root cap cells, and xylem pole pericycle cells.

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Amos Marc Bairoch

Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics

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María Martín

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Elisabeth Gasteiger

Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics

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Ioannis Xenarios

Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics

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Rolf Apweiler

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Suzanna E. Lewis

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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