The comparative toxicogenomics database: update 2011

AP Davis, BL King, S Mockus, CG Murphy… - Nucleic acids …, 2010 - academic.oup.com
AP Davis, BL King, S Mockus, CG Murphy, C Saraceni-Richards, M Rosenstein, T Wiegers…
Nucleic acids research, 2010academic.oup.com
Abstract The Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD) is a public resource that
promotes understanding about the interaction of environmental chemicals with gene
products, and their effects on human health. Biocurators at CTD manually curate a triad of
chemical–gene, chemical–disease and gene–disease relationships from the literature.
These core data are then integrated to construct chemical–gene–disease networks and to
predict many novel relationships using different types of associated data. Since 2009, we …
Abstract
The Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD) is a public resource that promotes understanding about the interaction of environmental chemicals with gene products, and their effects on human health. Biocurators at CTD manually curate a triad of chemical–gene, chemical–disease and gene–disease relationships from the literature. These core data are then integrated to construct chemical–gene–disease networks and to predict many novel relationships using different types of associated data. Since 2009, we dramatically increased the content of CTD to 1.4 million chemical–gene–disease data points and added many features, statistical analyses and analytical tools, including GeneComps and ChemComps (to find comparable genes and chemicals that share toxicogenomic profiles), enriched Gene Ontology terms associated with chemicals, statistically ranked chemical–disease inferences, Venn diagram tools to discover overlapping and unique attributes of any set of chemicals, genes or disease, and enhanced gene pathway data content, among other features. Together, this wealth of expanded chemical–gene–disease data continues to help users generate testable hypotheses about the molecular mechanisms of environmental diseases. CTD is freely available at http://ctd.mdibl.org .
Oxford University Press