Arabidopsis Hormone Database

Other names: Arabidopsis Hormone Database 2.0 (AHD2.0), ahd2.0

Plant hormones are small organic molecules that influence almost every aspect of plant growth and development. Genetic and molecular studies have revealed a large number of genes that are involved in responses to numerous plant hormones, including auxin, gibberellin, cytokinin, abscisic acid, ethylene, jasmonic acid, salicylic acid, and brassinosteroid (1). Here, we develop an Arabidopsis hormone database (AHD), which aims to provide a systematic and comprehensive view of genes participating in plant hormonal regulation, as well as morphological phenotypes controlled by plant hormones. Based on data from mutant studies, transgenic analysis and gene ontology annotation, we have identified a total of 1,026 genes in the Arabidopsis genome that participate in plant hormone functions. Meanwhile, a phenotype ontology is developed to precisely describe myriad hormone-regulated morphological processes with standardized vocabularies. A web interface (http://ahd.cbi.pku.edu.cn) allows users to get rapid access to information about these hormone-related genes, including sequences, functional category, mutant information, phenotypic description, microarray data, and linked publications.

Webpage:
http://ahd.cbi.pku.edu.cn/

Publications:

Tags:

plant functional, regulatory and non-coding rna molecular interactions, pathways and networks model organisms natural language processing

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