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Comprehensive coverage of cardiovascular disease data in the disease portals at the Rat Genome Database
Author(s) -
ShurJen Wang,
Stanley J. F. Laulederkind,
G. Thomas Hayman,
Victoria Petri,
Jennifer R. Smith,
Marek Tutaj,
Rajni Nigam,
Melinda R. Dwinell,
Mary Shimoyama
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
physiological genomics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.078
H-Index - 112
eISSN - 1531-2267
pISSN - 1094-8341
DOI - 10.1152/physiolgenomics.00046.2016
Subject(s) - disease , genome , biology , annotation , gene , database , genome browser , computational biology , genetics , genomics , computer science , medicine , pathology
Cardiovascular diseases are complex diseases caused by a combination of genetic and environmental factors. To facilitate progress in complex disease research, the Rat Genome Database (RGD) provides the community with a disease portal where genome objects and biological data related to cardiovascular diseases are systematically organized. The purpose of this study is to present biocuration at RGD, including disease, genetic, and pathway data. The RGD curation team uses controlled vocabularies/ontologies to organize data curated from the published literature or imported from disease and pathway databases. These organized annotations are associated with genes, strains, and quantitative trait loci (QTLs), thus linking functional annotations to genome objects. Screen shots from the web pages are used to demonstrate the organization of annotations at RGD. The human cardiovascular disease genes identified by annotations were grouped according to data sources and their annotation profiles were compared by in-house tools and other enrichment tools available to the public. The analysis results show that the imported cardiovascular disease genes from ClinVar and OMIM are functionally different from the RGD manually curated genes in terms of pathway and Gene Ontology annotations. The inclusion of disease genes from other databases enriches the collection of disease genes not only in quantity but also in quality.

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