Phylogenetic analysis is widely used to predict enzyme function, yet building annotated and reusable trees is labor-intensive and requires extensive knowledge about the specific enzymes. Existing resources rarely cover biosynthetic enzymes and lack the context needed for meaningful analysis. We present PhyloNaP, the first large-scale resource dedicated to phylogenies of biosynthetic enzymes. PhyloNaP provides ~18,500 annotated and interactive trees enriched with chemical, functional, and taxonomic information. Users can classify their own sequences via phylogenetic placement, enabling functional inference in an evolutionary context. A contribution portal allows the community to submit curated trees. By combining scale, breadth of annotation, and interactive functionality, PhyloNaP fills a major gap in bioinformatics resources for enzyme discovery and annotation, with immediate applications to secondary metabolism and beyond. Availability: https://phylonap.cs.uni-tuebingen.de
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Aleksandra Korenskaia
Judit Szenei
Lisa Vader
Technical University of Denmark
University of Tübingen
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Korenskaia et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68d913a34ddcf71ba560bb2a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1101/2025.09.23.677986