BAV-LLPS: a database of bacterial, archaea, and virus liquid–liquid phase separation proteins

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Oxford University Press

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Abstract Motivation Liquid–liquid phase separation (LLPS) is a key process underlying the formation of biomolecular condensates, such as membrane-less organelles, that compartmentalize biochemical processes inside the cells. While LLPS has been extensively studied in eukaryotes, its role in bacteria, archaea, and viruses remains far less characterized. Recent studies in bacteria have revealed that LLPS-driven condensates play critical roles in RNA processing, stress response, and pathogenicity. Similarly, many viruses exploit LLPS to facilitate crucial steps in their infection cycles, including viral entry, genome replication, assembly, and host immune evasion. Results In this work, we introduce a hand-curated database of LLPS proteins from bacteria, archaea, and viruses (BAV-LLPS Database). This resource, extended through sequence similarity searches, comprises over 5000 proteins and integrates diverse data including biological annotations, sequence features, predicted disordered regions, LLPS per site probability, and AlphaFold2-based structural models. Additionally, our web server enables users to explore both the curated and homologous derived datasets, providing a platform to uncover evolutionary relationships and intrinsic and differential properties of LLPS proteins across various taxonomic groups. This work seeks to deepen our understanding of LLPS mechanisms beyond eukaryotic organisms, emphasizing their significance across diverse life forms. It also aims to foster the development of specialized predictive tools that will facilitate the exploration and characterization of LLPS processes in a wide array of living organisms, thereby contributing to advancements in both fundamental biological research and applied biomedical sciences. Availability and implementation BAV-LLPS DB is freely accessible at https://bav-llps-db.bioinformatica.org/. The data can be retrieved from the website. The source code of the database can be downloaded from https://bav-llps-db.bioinformatica.org/download.

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Source code, Code (set theory), Virus, Phase (matter), Escherichia coli Proteins, Software

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