98, 12.55 and 14.40 for archaea, bacteria and eukaryota, with standard derivations 8.22, 16.65 and 12.25, respectively. Overall, over 90% of the glydromes in archaea, bacteria
and eukaryota are lower than 30 in this ratio, respectively. It is surprising to find that the metagenomes encode 95.38 times more WGHs than FACs but no cellulosome components. We speculate that there may be some novel CBM domains being used by these WGHs in these metagenomes. An alternative hypothesis could be that microbes in a community generously secrete WGHs to degrade biomass and live on the hydrolysis products in the nearby regions only. Conclusions We conducted the first large-scale annotation of glydromes in all the sequenced genomes and metagenomes. We have made a number of interesting observations about glydromes of the sequences genomes and metagenomes. Among them, two less well-studied glydromes were observed in dozens of organisms, which selleck are A) glycosyl hydrolases were found to have cell surface LY2835219 nmr anchoring domains and can bind to the cell surfaces by themselves; and B) Clostridium acetobutylicum and four other bacteria from the phylum Firmicutes encode all cellulosome components except for the cell surface anchoring proteins SLHs, suggesting
that the cellulosomes may have link to the cell surfaces through some novel mechanisms. Individual cases have been experimentally observed, but further studies are needed to uncover the underlining mechanisms and how they evolved into the current glydrome structures. Our data also suggested that the animal gut metagenomes are rich in novel glycosyl
hydrolases, providing new targets for further experimental studies. Availability and requirements Project name: GASdb; Project home page: http://csbl.bmb.uga.edu/~ffzhou/GASdb/; Operating systems: Platform independent; Programming language: Perl, PHP, Apache License: none; Restrictions to use by non-academics: none. Acknowledgements This work is supported in part by the grant for the BioEnergy Science Center, which C-X-C chemokine receptor type 7 (CXCR-7) is a U.S. Department of Energy BioEnergy Research Center supported by the Office of Biological and Environmental Research in the DOE Office of Science, the National Science Foundation (DBI-0354771, ITR-IIS-0407204, DBI-0542119, CCF0621700), National Institutes of Health (1R01GM075331 and 1R01GM081682) and a Distinguished Scholar grant from the Georgia Cancer Coalition. We’d like to thank Dr Yanbin Yin for his helpful discussions. Electronic supplementary material Additional file 1: The numbers of annotated glydrome components in each organism. A summary of the numbers of the annotated glydrome components in each organism. (XLS 502 KB) References 1. Galperin MY: The quest for biofuels fuels genome sequencing. GANT61 Environ Microbiol 2008,10(10):2471–2475.PubMedCrossRef 2. Rubin EM: Genomics of cellulosic biofuels. Nature 2008,454(7206):841–845.PubMedCrossRef 3. Himmel ME: Biomass Recalcitrance: Deconstructing the Plant Cell Wall For Bioenergy.