46 results on '"Sciaky D"'
Search Results
2. Neoplastic progression in crown gall in tobacco without elevated auxin levels
- Author
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Pengelly, W.L., Vijayaraghavan, S.J., and Sciaky, D.
- Published
- 1986
3. A Consensus Sequence for the Adenovirus-2 Genome
- Author
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Roberts, R. J., Akusjarvi, G., Alestrom, P., Gelinas, R. E., Gingeras, T. R., Sciaky, D., Pettersson, U., Becker, Yechiel, editor, Hadar, Julia, editor, and Doerfler, Walter, editor
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
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4. The Incorporation and Expression of Agrobacterium Plasmid Genes in Crown Gall Tumors
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Nester, E. W., Merlo, D. J., Drummond, M. H., Sciaky, D., Montoya, A. L., Chilton, M.-D., Hollaender, Alexander, editor, Burris, R. H., editor, Day, P. R., editor, Hardy, R. W. F., editor, Helinski, D. R., editor, Lamborg, M. R., editor, Owens, L., editor, and Valentine, R. C., editor
- Published
- 1977
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- View/download PDF
5. A CTD-Pfizer collaboration: manual curation of 88 000 scientific articles text mined for drug-disease and drug-phenotype interactions
- Author
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Davis, A. P., primary, Wiegers, T. C., additional, Roberts, P. M., additional, King, B. L., additional, Lay, J. M., additional, Lennon-Hopkins, K., additional, Sciaky, D., additional, Johnson, R., additional, Keating, H., additional, Greene, N., additional, Hernandez, R., additional, McConnell, K. J., additional, Enayetallah, A. E., additional, and Mattingly, C. J., additional
- Published
- 2013
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- View/download PDF
6. 1 HNF1α REGULATES GUANYLIN EXPRESSION.
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Hochman, J A, primary, Sciaky, D, additional, Whitaker, T, additional, and Cohen, M B, additional
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- 1996
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7. 8 GENOMIC SEQUENCE AND TISSUE DISTRIBUTION OF MURINE GUANYLIN
- Author
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Sciaky, D, primary, Kosiba, J, additional, Lewis, G., additional, and Cohen, M B, additional
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- 1994
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8. Computer programs for the assembly of DNA sequences.
- Author
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Gingeras, T.R., Milazzo, J.P., Sciaky, D., and Roberts, R.J.
- Published
- 1979
9. Prostaglandin-endoperoxide H synthase-2 expression in human thyroid epithelium. Evidence for constitutive expression in vivo and in cultured KAT-50 cells.
- Author
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Smith, T J, Jennings, T A, Sciaky, D, and Cao, H J
- Abstract
Prostaglandin-endoperoxide H synthase (PGHS) (EC 1.14.99.1) expression was examined in human thyroid tissue and in KAT-50, a well differentiated human thyroid epithelial cell line. PGHS-1 is found constitutively expressed in most healthy tissues, whereas PGHS-2 is highly inducible and currently thought to be expressed, with few exceptions, only in diseased tissues. Surprisingly, PGHS-2 mRNA and protein were easily detected in normal thyroid tissue. KAT-50 cells express high levels of constitutive PGHS-2 mRNA and protein under basal culture conditions. Compounds usually associated with PGHS-2 induction, including interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta), phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate, and serum transiently down-regulated PGHS-2 expression. Human PGHS-2 promoter constructs (-1840/+123 and -831/+123) fused to a luciferase reporter and transfected into untreated KAT-50 cells exhibited substantial activity. NS-398, a highly selective inhibitor of PGHS-2 could inhibit substantial basal prostaglandin E2 production. Exogenous IL-1 receptor antagonist or IL-1alpha neutralizing antibodies could attenuate constitutive PGHS-2 expression in KAT-50 cells, suggesting that endogenous IL-1alpha synthesis was driving PGHS-2 expression. Our findings suggest that normal thyroid epithelium expresses high constitutive levels of PGHS-2 in situ and in vitro and this enzyme is active in the generation of prostaglandin E2. Thus, unprovoked PGHS-2 expression might be considerably more widespread in healthy tissues than is currently believed.
- Published
- 1999
10. Nucleotide sequences from the adenovirus-2 genome.
- Author
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Gingeras, T R, Sciaky, D, Gelinas, R E, Bing-Dong, J, Yen, C E, Kelly, M M, Bullock, P A, Parsons, B L, O'Neill, K E, and Roberts, R J
- Abstract
The sequence of 15,441 nucleotides from the adenovirus-2 genome has been determined and includes the regions between coordinates 0-32% and 89-100%. These regions contain the early (E) transcription units E1A, E1B, E2B, and E4, the genes for polypeptides IVa2 and IX, the COOH terminus of fiber polypeptide, as well as the two virus-associated RNAs and the leader sequences for the major late mRNAs. Analysis of tryptic peptides from the terminal protein and its precursor (Smart, J. E., and Stillman, B. W. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 13499-13506) has allowed the gene for the precursor terminal protein to be positioned between coordinates 28.0 and 23.5 on the 1-strand. A minimum Mr = 74,500 is predicted. A second, longer open reading frame is also found on the 1-strand between coordinates 22.9 and 14.2 and predicts a polypeptide of at least Mr = 120,000. Many open reading frames longer than 10,000 exist within this sequence although less than half of them can be assigned to previously characterized polypeptides. As with other viral genomes, the available coding information is highly compressed. Intergenic distances are very short and examples are found of genes which overlap either on the same strand or the complementary strand.
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- 1982
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11. Octopine and nopaline metabolism in Agrobacterium tumefaciens and crown gall tumor cells: role of plasmid genes
- Author
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Montoya, A L, Chilton, M D, Gordon, M P, Sciaky, D, and Nester, E W
- Abstract
Crown gall tumors produced octopine or nopaline or neither compound, depending on the bacterial strain that incited the tumor. The genes specifying production of octopine or nopaline by the tumor were transferred to recipient bacterial strains when the large plasmid associated with virulence was transferred by either conjugation or deoxyribonucleic acid-mediated transformation. Our results, which confirm the work of others (Bomhoff et al., 1976; Goldman et al., 1968; Petit et al., 1970), indicate that, in general, the strains that utilize octopine induce tumors that synthesize octopine, and those that utilize nopaline induce tumors that synthesize nopaline. However, there were several notable exceptions. One class utilized both octopine and nopaline, but the tumors induced by these strains produced only nopaline. Another class utilized nopaline, but their tumors synthesized neither nopaline nor octopine. Mutants were isolated from a number of either octopine- or nopaline-utilizing strains that no longer could utilize the relevant guanido amino acid. These strains, which were mutant in the gene specifying octopine or nopaline oxidase, still retained the permease for these amino acids as well as virulence. Tumors induced by these mutants still synthesized approximately the same levels of octopine and nopaline as tumors induced by their parents. These results suggest that the plasmid gene that determines production of octopine or nopaline by the tumor is distinct from the plasmid gene that determines their catabolism by the bacteria.
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- 1977
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12. Nucleotide sequences from the adenovirus-2 genome
- Author
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Tr, Gingeras, Sciaky D, Re, Gelinas, Bing-Dong J, Ce, Yen, Mm, Kelly, Pa, Bullock, Bl, Parsons, Neill Ke, O., and Richard Roberts
- Subjects
Base Sequence ,Genes, Viral ,Transcription, Genetic ,Adenoviruses, Human ,Peptide Fragments ,Cell Line ,Molecular Weight ,Viral Proteins ,Genes ,DNA, Viral ,Humans ,RNA, Messenger ,Cloning, Molecular ,HeLa Cells - Abstract
The sequence of 15,441 nucleotides from the adenovirus-2 genome has been determined and includes the regions between coordinates 0-32% and 89-100%. These regions contain the early (E) transcription units E1A, E1B, E2B, and E4, the genes for polypeptides IVa2 and IX, the COOH terminus of fiber polypeptide, as well as the two virus-associated RNAs and the leader sequences for the major late mRNAs. Analysis of tryptic peptides from the terminal protein and its precursor (Smart, J. E., and Stillman, B. W. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 13499-13506) has allowed the gene for the precursor terminal protein to be positioned between coordinates 28.0 and 23.5 on the 1-strand. A minimum Mr = 74,500 is predicted. A second, longer open reading frame is also found on the 1-strand between coordinates 22.9 and 14.2 and predicts a polypeptide of at least Mr = 120,000. Many open reading frames longer than 10,000 exist within this sequence although less than half of them can be assigned to previously characterized polypeptides. As with other viral genomes, the available coding information is highly compressed. Intergenic distances are very short and examples are found of genes which overlap either on the same strand or the complementary strand.
- Published
- 1982
13. Information Content of the Adenovirus-2 Genome
- Author
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Roberts, R.J., primary, Sciaky, D., additional, Gelinas, R.E., additional, Jiang, B.-D., additional, Yen, C.E., additional, Kelly, M.M., additional, Bullock, P.A., additional, Parsons, B.L., additional, O'Neill, K.E., additional, and Gingeras, T.R., additional
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
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14. Comparative toxicogenomics database's 20th anniversary: update 2025.
- Author
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Davis AP, Wiegers TC, Sciaky D, Barkalow F, Strong M, Wyatt B, Wiegers J, McMorran R, Abrar S, and Mattingly CJ
- Abstract
For 20 years, the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD; https://ctdbase.org) has provided high-quality, literature-based curated content describing how environmental chemicals affect human health. Today, CTD includes over 94 million toxicogenomic connections relating chemicals, genes/proteins, phenotypes, anatomical terms, diseases, comparative species, pathways and exposures. In this 20th year anniversary update, we reflect on CTD's remarkable growth and provide an overview of the increased data content and new features, including enhancements to the curation workflow (e.g. new exposure curation tool and expanded use of natural language processing), added functionality (e.g. improvements to CTD Tetramers and Pathway View tools) and significant upgrades to software and infrastructure. Linking lab-based core curation with real-world human exposure curation via the use of controlled vocabularies facilitates analysis of content across the entire environmental health continuum, from molecular toxicological mechanisms to the population level, and vice versa. The 'prototype database' originally described in 2004 has evolved into a premier, sophisticated, highly cited and well-engineered knowledgebase and discoverybase that is utilized by scientists worldwide to design testable hypotheses about environmental health., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.)
- Published
- 2024
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15. Transforming environmental health datasets from the comparative toxicogenomics database into chord diagrams to visualize molecular mechanisms.
- Author
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Wyatt B, Davis AP, Wiegers TC, Wiegers J, Abrar S, Sciaky D, Barkalow F, Strong M, and Mattingly CJ
- Abstract
In environmental health, the specific molecular mechanisms connecting a chemical exposure to an adverse endpoint are often unknown, reflecting knowledge gaps. At the public Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD; https://ctdbase.org/), we integrate manually curated, literature-based interactions from CTD to compute four-unit blocks of information organized as a potential step-wise molecular mechanism, known as "CGPD-tetramers," wherein a chemical interacts with a gene product to trigger a phenotype which can be linked to a disease. These computationally derived datasets can be used to fill the gaps and offer testable mechanistic information. Users can generate CGPD-tetramers for any combination of chemical, gene, phenotype, and/or disease of interest at CTD; however, such queries typically result in the generation of thousands of CGPD-tetramers. Here, we describe a novel approach to transform these large datasets into user-friendly chord diagrams using R. This visualization process is straightforward, simple to implement, and accessible to inexperienced users that have never used R before. Combining CGPD-tetramers into a single chord diagram helps identify potential key chemicals, genes, phenotypes, and diseases. This visualization allows users to more readily analyze computational datasets that can fill the exposure knowledge gaps in the environmental health continuum., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Wyatt, Davis, Wiegers, Wiegers, Abrar, Sciaky, Barkalow, Strong and Mattingly.)
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- 2024
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16. Activation of CBASS Cap5 endonuclease immune effector by cyclic nucleotides.
- Author
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Rechkoblit O, Sciaky D, Kreitler DF, Buku A, Kottur J, and Aggarwal AK
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- Ligands, Models, Chemical, Enzyme Activation, DNA chemistry, DNA metabolism, Nucleotides, Cyclic chemistry, Dinucleoside Phosphates chemistry, Apoproteins chemistry, Bacteriophages physiology, Pseudomonas syringae chemistry, Pseudomonas syringae enzymology, Pseudomonas syringae virology, Bacterial Proteins chemistry, Endonucleases chemistry
- Abstract
The bacterial cyclic oligonucleotide-based antiphage signaling system (CBASS) is similar to the cGAS-STING system in humans, containing an enzyme that synthesizes a cyclic nucleotide on viral infection and an effector that senses the second messenger for the antiviral response. Cap5, containing a SAVED domain coupled to an HNH DNA endonuclease domain, is the most abundant CBASS effector, yet the mechanism by which it becomes activated for cell killing remains unknown. We present here high-resolution structures of full-length Cap5 from Pseudomonas syringae (Ps) with second messengers. The key to PsCap5 activation is a dimer-to-tetramer transition, whereby the binding of second messenger to dimer triggers an open-to-closed transformation of the SAVED domains, furnishing a surface for assembly of the tetramer. This movement propagates to the HNH domains, juxtaposing and converting two HNH domains into states for DNA destruction. These results show how Cap5 effects bacterial cell suicide and we provide proof-in-principle data that the CBASS can be extrinsically activated to limit bacterial infections., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.)
- Published
- 2024
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17. CTD tetramers: a new online tool that computationally links curated chemicals, genes, phenotypes, and diseases to inform molecular mechanisms for environmental health.
- Author
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Davis AP, Wiegers TC, Wiegers J, Wyatt B, Johnson RJ, Sciaky D, Barkalow F, Strong M, Planchart A, and Mattingly CJ
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Databases, Factual, Phenotype, Environmental Exposure, Toxicogenetics, Environmental Health
- Abstract
The molecular mechanisms connecting environmental exposures to adverse endpoints are often unknown, reflecting knowledge gaps. At the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD), we developed a bioinformatics approach that integrates manually curated, literature-based interactions from CTD to generate a "CGPD-tetramer": a 4-unit block of information organized as a step-wise molecular mechanism linking an initiating Chemical, an interacting Gene, a Phenotype, and a Disease outcome. Here, we describe a novel, user-friendly tool called CTD Tetramers that generates these evidence-based CGPD-tetramers for any curated chemical, gene, phenotype, or disease of interest. Tetramers offer potential solutions for the unknown underlying mechanisms and intermediary phenotypes connecting a chemical exposure to a disease. Additionally, multiple tetramers can be assembled to construct detailed modes-of-action for chemical-induced disease pathways. As well, tetramers can help inform environmental influences on adverse outcome pathways (AOPs). We demonstrate the tool's utility with relevant use cases for a variety of environmental chemicals (eg, perfluoroalkyl substances, bisphenol A), phenotypes (eg, apoptosis, spermatogenesis, inflammatory response), and diseases (eg, asthma, obesity, male infertility). Finally, we map AOP adverse outcome terms to corresponding CTD terms, allowing users to query for tetramers that can help augment AOP pathways with additional stressors, genes, and phenotypes, as well as formulate potential AOP disease networks (eg, liver cirrhosis and prostate cancer). This novel tool, as part of the complete suite of tools offered at CTD, provides users with computational datasets and their supporting evidence to potentially fill exposure knowledge gaps and develop testable hypotheses about environmental health., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Toxicology. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2023
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18. Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD): update 2023.
- Author
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Davis AP, Wiegers TC, Johnson RJ, Sciaky D, Wiegers J, and Mattingly CJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Databases, Factual, Phenotype, Toxicogenetics
- Abstract
The Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD; http://ctdbase.org/) harmonizes cross-species heterogeneous data for chemical exposures and their biological repercussions by manually curating and interrelating chemical, gene, phenotype, anatomy, disease, taxa, and exposure content from the published literature. This curated information is integrated to generate inferences, providing potential molecular mediators to develop testable hypotheses and fill in knowledge gaps for environmental health. This dual nature, acting as both a knowledgebase and a discoverybase, makes CTD a unique resource for the scientific community. Here, we report a 20% increase in overall CTD content for 17 100 chemicals, 54 300 genes, 6100 phenotypes, 7270 diseases and 202 000 exposure statements. We also present CTD Tetramers, a novel tool that computationally generates four-unit information blocks connecting a chemical, gene, phenotype, and disease to construct potential molecular mechanistic pathways. Finally, we integrate terms for human biological media used in the CTD Exposure module to corresponding CTD Anatomy pages, allowing users to survey the chemical profiles for any tissue-of-interest and see how these environmental biomarkers are related to phenotypes for any anatomical site. These, and other webpage visual enhancements, continue to promote CTD as a practical, user-friendly, and innovative resource for finding information and generating testable hypotheses about environmental health., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.)
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- 2023
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19. High-resolution structures of the SARS-CoV-2 N7-methyltransferase inform therapeutic development.
- Author
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Kottur J, Rechkoblit O, Quintana-Feliciano R, Sciaky D, and Aggarwal AK
- Subjects
- Antiviral Agents pharmacology, Humans, Methyltransferases metabolism, S-Adenosylhomocysteine, S-Adenosylmethionine metabolism, Viral Nonstructural Proteins chemistry, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19 Drug Treatment
- Abstract
Emergence of SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus has led to millions of deaths globally. We present three high-resolution crystal structures of the SARS-CoV-2 nsp14 N7-methyltransferase core bound to S-adenosylmethionine (1.62 Å), S-adenosylhomocysteine (1.55 Å) and sinefungin (1.41 Å). We identify features of the methyltransferase core that are crucial for the development of antivirals and show SAH as the best scaffold for the design of antivirals against SARS-CoV-2 and other pathogenic coronaviruses., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.)
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- 2022
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20. Predicting molecular mechanisms, pathways, and health outcomes induced by Juul e-cigarette aerosol chemicals using the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database.
- Author
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Grondin CJ, Davis AP, Wiegers JA, Wiegers TC, Sciaky D, Johnson RJ, and Mattingly CJ
- Abstract
There is a critical need to understand the health risks associated with vaping e-cigarettes, which has reached epidemic levels among teens. Juul is currently the most popular type of e-cigarette on the market. Using the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD; http://ctdbase.org), a public resource that integrates chemical, gene, phenotype and disease data, we aimed to analyze the potential molecular mechanisms of eight chemicals detected in the aerosols generated by heating Juul e-cigarette pods: nicotine, acetaldehyde, formaldehyde, free radicals, crotonaldehyde, acetone, pyruvaldehyde, and particulate matter. Curated content in CTD, including chemical-gene, chemical-phenotype, and chemical-disease interactions, as well as associated phenotypes and pathway enrichment, were analyzed to help identify potential molecular mechanisms and diseases associated with vaping. Nicotine shows the most direct disease associations of these chemicals, followed by particulate matter and formaldehyde. Together, these chemicals show a direct marker or mechanistic relationship with 400 unique diseases in CTD, particularly in the categories of cardiovascular diseases, nervous system diseases, respiratory tract diseases, cancers, and mental disorders. We chose three respiratory tract diseases to investigate further, and found that in addition to cellular processes of apoptosis and cell proliferation, prioritized phenotypes underlying Juul-associated respiratory tract disease outcomes include response to oxidative stress, inflammatory response, and several cell signaling pathways (p38MAPK, NIK/NFkappaB, calcium-mediated)., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest with respect to financial interests, research, authorship, and/or publication of this article., (© 2021 The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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21. Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD): update 2021.
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Davis AP, Grondin CJ, Johnson RJ, Sciaky D, Wiegers J, Wiegers TC, and Mattingly CJ
- Subjects
- Databases, Chemical, Databases, Genetic, Genotype, Humans, Internet, Knowledge Bases, Organ Specificity, Phenotype, Prescription Drugs chemistry, Software, Toxicogenetics methods, Xenobiotics chemistry, Databases, Factual, Gene-Environment Interaction, Genome, Human drug effects, Genomics methods, Prescription Drugs pharmacology, Xenobiotics toxicity
- Abstract
The public Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD; http://ctdbase.org/) is an innovative digital ecosystem that relates toxicological information for chemicals, genes, phenotypes, diseases, and exposures to advance understanding about human health. Literature-based, manually curated interactions are integrated to create a knowledgebase that harmonizes cross-species heterogeneous data for chemical exposures and their biological repercussions. In this biennial update, we report a 20% increase in CTD curated content and now provide 45 million toxicogenomic relationships for over 16 300 chemicals, 51 300 genes, 5500 phenotypes, 7200 diseases and 163 000 exposure events, from 600 comparative species. Furthermore, we increase the functionality of chemical-phenotype content with new data-tabs on CTD Disease pages (to help fill in knowledge gaps for environmental health) and new phenotype search parameters (for Batch Query and Venn analysis tools). As well, we introduce new CTD Anatomy pages that allow users to uniquely explore and analyze chemical-phenotype interactions from an anatomical perspective. Finally, we have enhanced CTD Chemical pages with new literature-based chemical synonyms (to improve querying) and added 1600 amino acid-based compounds (to increase chemical landscape). Together, these updates continue to augment CTD as a powerful resource for generating testable hypotheses about the etiologies and molecular mechanisms underlying environmentally influenced diseases., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.)
- Published
- 2021
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22. CTD Anatomy: analyzing chemical-induced phenotypes and exposures from an anatomical perspective, with implications for environmental health studies.
- Author
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Davis AP, Wiegers TC, Wiegers J, Grondin CJ, Johnson RJ, Sciaky D, and Mattingly CJ
- Abstract
The Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD) is a freely available public resource that curates and interrelates chemical, gene/protein, phenotype, disease, organism, and exposure data. CTD can be used to address toxicological mechanisms for environmental chemicals and facilitate the generation of testable hypotheses about how exposures affect human health. At CTD, manually curated interactions for chemical-induced phenotypes are enhanced with anatomy terms (tissues, fluids, and cell types) to describe the physiological system of the reported event. These same anatomy terms are used to annotate the human media (e.g., urine, hair, nail, blood, etc.) in which an environmental chemical was assayed for exposure. Currently, CTD uses more than 880 unique anatomy terms to contextualize over 255,000 chemical-phenotype interactions and 167,000 exposure statements. These annotations allow chemical-phenotype interactions and exposure data to be explored from a novel, anatomical perspective. Here, we describe CTD's anatomy curation process (including the construction of a controlled, interoperable vocabulary) and new anatomy webpages (that coalesce and organize the curated chemical-phenotype and exposure data sets). We also provide examples that demonstrate how this feature can be used to identify system- and cell-specific chemical-induced toxicities, help inform exposure data, prioritize phenotypes for environmental diseases, survey tissue and pregnancy exposomes, and facilitate data connections with external resources. Anatomy annotations advance understanding of environmental health by providing new ways to explore and survey chemical-induced events and exposure studies in the CTD framework., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare no conflicts of interest with respect to financial interests, research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
- Published
- 2021
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23. Leveraging the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database to Fill in Knowledge Gaps for Environmental Health: A Test Case for Air Pollution-induced Cardiovascular Disease.
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Davis AP, Wiegers TC, Grondin CJ, Johnson RJ, Sciaky D, Wiegers J, and Mattingly CJ
- Subjects
- Environmental Exposure, Environmental Health, Humans, Air Pollutants toxicity, Air Pollution, Cardiovascular Diseases chemically induced, Toxicogenetics
- Abstract
Environmental health studies relate how exposures (eg, chemicals) affect human health and disease; however, in most cases, the molecular and biological mechanisms connecting an exposure with a disease remain unknown. To help fill in these knowledge gaps, we sought to leverage content from the public Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD) to identify potential intermediary steps. In a proof-of-concept study, we systematically compute the genes, molecular mechanisms, and biological events for the environmental health association linking air pollution toxicants with 2 cardiovascular diseases (myocardial infarction and hypertension) as a test case. Our approach integrates 5 types of curated interactions in CTD to build sets of "CGPD-tetramers," computationally constructed information blocks relating a Chemical- Gene interaction with a Phenotype and Disease. This bioinformatics strategy generates 653 CGPD-tetramers for air pollution-associated myocardial infarction (involving 5 pollutants, 58 genes, and 117 phenotypes) and 701 CGPD-tetramers for air pollution-associated hypertension (involving 3 pollutants, 96 genes, and 142 phenotypes). Collectively, we identify 19 genes and 96 phenotypes shared between these 2 air pollutant-induced outcomes, and suggest important roles for oxidative stress, inflammation, immune responses, cell death, and circulatory system processes. Moreover, CGPD-tetramers can be assembled into extensive chemical-induced disease pathways involving multiple gene products and sequential biological events, and many of these computed intermediary steps are validated in the literature. Our method does not require a priori knowledge of the toxicant, interacting gene, or biological system, and can be used to analyze any environmental chemical-induced disease curated within the public CTD framework. This bioinformatics strategy links and interrelates chemicals, genes, phenotypes, and diseases to fill in knowledge gaps for environmental health studies, as demonstrated for air pollution-associated cardiovascular disease, but can be adapted by researchers for any environmentally influenced disease-of-interest., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Toxicology. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2020
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24. The Comparative Toxicogenomics Database: update 2019.
- Author
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Davis AP, Grondin CJ, Johnson RJ, Sciaky D, McMorran R, Wiegers J, Wiegers TC, and Mattingly CJ
- Subjects
- Disease genetics, Environmental Exposure, Humans, Phenotype, Vocabulary, Controlled, Databases, Pharmaceutical, Toxicogenetics
- Abstract
The Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD; http://ctdbase.org/) is a premier public resource for literature-based, manually curated associations between chemicals, gene products, phenotypes, diseases, and environmental exposures. In this biennial update, we present our new chemical-phenotype module that codes chemical-induced effects on phenotypes, curated using controlled vocabularies for chemicals, phenotypes, taxa, and anatomical descriptors; this module provides unique opportunities to explore cellular and system-level phenotypes of the pre-disease state and allows users to construct predictive adverse outcome pathways (linking chemical-gene molecular initiating events with phenotypic key events, diseases, and population-level health outcomes). We also report a 46% increase in CTD manually curated content, which when integrated with other datasets yields more than 38 million toxicogenomic relationships. We describe new querying and display features for our enhanced chemical-exposure science module, providing greater scope of content and utility. As well, we discuss an updated MEDIC disease vocabulary with over 1700 new terms and accession identifiers. To accommodate these increases in data content and functionality, CTD has upgraded its computational infrastructure. These updates continue to improve CTD and help inform new testable hypotheses about the etiology and mechanisms underlying environmentally influenced diseases.
- Published
- 2019
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25. Chemical-Induced Phenotypes at CTD Help Inform the Predisease State and Construct Adverse Outcome Pathways.
- Author
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Davis AP, Wiegers TC, Wiegers J, Johnson RJ, Sciaky D, Grondin CJ, and Mattingly CJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Gene Ontology, Gene-Environment Interaction, Humans, Adverse Outcome Pathways, Databases, Factual, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions genetics, Phenotype, Toxicogenetics methods
- Abstract
The Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD; http://ctdbase.org) is a public resource that manually curates the scientific literature to provide content that illuminates the molecular mechanisms by which environmental exposures affect human health. We introduce our new chemical-phenotype module that describes how chemicals can affect molecular, cellular, and physiological phenotypes. At CTD, we operationally distinguish between phenotypes and diseases, wherein a phenotype refers to a nondisease biological event: eg, decreased cell cycle arrest (phenotype) versus liver cancer (disease), increased fat cell proliferation (phenotype) versus morbid obesity (disease), etc. Chemical-phenotype interactions are expressed in a formal structured notation using controlled terms for chemicals, phenotypes, taxon, and anatomical descriptors. Combining this information with CTD's chemical-disease module allows inferences to be made between phenotypes and diseases, yielding potential insight into the predisease state. Integration of all 4 CTD modules furnishes unique opportunities for toxicologists to generate computationally predictive adverse outcome pathways, linking chemical-gene molecular initiating events with phenotypic key events, adverse diseases, and population-level health outcomes. As examples, we present 3 diverse case studies discerning the effect of vehicle emissions on altered leukocyte migration, the role of cadmium in influencing phenotypes preceding Alzheimer disease, and the connection of arsenic-induced glucose metabolic phenotypes with diabetes. To date, CTD contains over 165 000 interactions that connect more than 6400 chemicals to 3900 phenotypes for 760 anatomical terms in 215 species, from over 19 000 scientific articles. To our knowledge, this is the first comprehensive set of manually curated, literature-based, contextualized, chemical-induced, nondisease phenotype data provided to the public.
- Published
- 2018
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26. The Comparative Toxicogenomics Database: update 2017.
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Davis AP, Grondin CJ, Johnson RJ, Sciaky D, King BL, McMorran R, Wiegers J, Wiegers TC, and Mattingly CJ
- Subjects
- Computational Biology methods, Gene Ontology, Humans, Signal Transduction, User-Computer Interface, Web Browser, Databases, Chemical, Databases, Genetic, Search Engine, Toxicogenetics methods
- Abstract
The Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD; http://ctdbase.org/) provides information about interactions between chemicals and gene products, and their relationships to diseases. Core CTD content (chemical-gene, chemical-disease and gene-disease interactions manually curated from the literature) are integrated with each other as well as with select external datasets to generate expanded networks and predict novel associations. Today, core CTD includes more than 30.5 million toxicogenomic connections relating chemicals/drugs, genes/proteins, diseases, taxa, Gene Ontology (GO) annotations, pathways, and gene interaction modules. In this update, we report a 33% increase in our core data content since 2015, describe our new exposure module (that harmonizes exposure science information with core toxicogenomic data) and introduce a novel dataset of GO-disease inferences (that identify common molecular underpinnings for seemingly unrelated pathologies). These advancements centralize and contextualize real-world chemical exposures with molecular pathways to help scientists generate testable hypotheses in an effort to understand the etiology and mechanisms underlying environmentally influenced diseases., (© The Author(s) 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.)
- Published
- 2017
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27. Generating Gene Ontology-Disease Inferences to Explore Mechanisms of Human Disease at the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database.
- Author
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Davis AP, Wiegers TC, King BL, Wiegers J, Grondin CJ, Sciaky D, Johnson RJ, and Mattingly CJ
- Subjects
- Computational Biology, Drug Repositioning, Humans, Databases, Genetic, Disease genetics, Gene Ontology, Toxicogenetics
- Abstract
Strategies for discovering common molecular events among disparate diseases hold promise for improving understanding of disease etiology and expanding treatment options. One technique is to leverage curated datasets found in the public domain. The Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD; http://ctdbase.org/) manually curates chemical-gene, chemical-disease, and gene-disease interactions from the scientific literature. The use of official gene symbols in CTD interactions enables this information to be combined with the Gene Ontology (GO) file from NCBI Gene. By integrating these GO-gene annotations with CTD's gene-disease dataset, we produce 753,000 inferences between 15,700 GO terms and 4,200 diseases, providing opportunities to explore presumptive molecular underpinnings of diseases and identify biological similarities. Through a variety of applications, we demonstrate the utility of this novel resource. As a proof-of-concept, we first analyze known repositioned drugs (e.g., raloxifene and sildenafil) and see that their target diseases have a greater degree of similarity when comparing GO terms vs. genes. Next, a computational analysis predicts seemingly non-intuitive diseases (e.g., stomach ulcers and atherosclerosis) as being similar to bipolar disorder, and these are validated in the literature as reported co-diseases. Additionally, we leverage other CTD content to develop testable hypotheses about thalidomide-gene networks to treat seemingly disparate diseases. Finally, we illustrate how CTD tools can rank a series of drugs as potential candidates for repositioning against B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia and predict cisplatin and the small molecule inhibitor JQ1 as lead compounds. The CTD dataset is freely available for users to navigate pathologies within the context of extensive biological processes, molecular functions, and cellular components conferred by GO. This inference set should aid researchers, bioinformaticists, and pharmaceutical drug makers in finding commonalities in disease mechanisms, which in turn could help identify new therapeutics, new indications for existing pharmaceuticals, potential disease comorbidities, and alerts for side effects.
- Published
- 2016
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28. BioCreative V CDR task corpus: a resource for chemical disease relation extraction.
- Author
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Li J, Sun Y, Johnson RJ, Sciaky D, Wei CH, Leaman R, Davis AP, Mattingly CJ, Wiegers TC, and Lu Z
- Subjects
- Databases, Factual, Humans, Computational Biology methods, Data Mining methods, Disease, Toxicogenetics methods
- Abstract
Community-run, formal evaluations and manually annotated text corpora are critically important for advancing biomedical text-mining research. Recently in BioCreative V, a new challenge was organized for the tasks of disease named entity recognition (DNER) and chemical-induced disease (CID) relation extraction. Given the nature of both tasks, a test collection is required to contain both disease/chemical annotations and relation annotations in the same set of articles. Despite previous efforts in biomedical corpus construction, none was found to be sufficient for the task. Thus, we developed our own corpus called BC5CDR during the challenge by inviting a team of Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) indexers for disease/chemical entity annotation and Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD) curators for CID relation annotation. To ensure high annotation quality and productivity, detailed annotation guidelines and automatic annotation tools were provided. The resulting BC5CDR corpus consists of 1500 PubMed articles with 4409 annotated chemicals, 5818 diseases and 3116 chemical-disease interactions. Each entity annotation includes both the mention text spans and normalized concept identifiers, using MeSH as the controlled vocabulary. To ensure accuracy, the entities were first captured independently by two annotators followed by a consensus annotation: The average inter-annotator agreement (IAA) scores were 87.49% and 96.05% for the disease and chemicals, respectively, in the test set according to the Jaccard similarity coefficient. Our corpus was successfully used for the BioCreative V challenge tasks and should serve as a valuable resource for the text-mining research community.Database URL: http://www.biocreative.org/tasks/biocreative-v/track-3-cdr/., (Published by Oxford University Press 2016. This work is written by US Government employees and is in the public domain in the United States.)
- Published
- 2016
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29. The Comparative Toxicogenomics Database's 10th year anniversary: update 2015.
- Author
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Davis AP, Grondin CJ, Lennon-Hopkins K, Saraceni-Richards C, Sciaky D, King BL, Wiegers TC, and Mattingly CJ
- Subjects
- Disease etiology, Disease genetics, Genomics history, History, 21st Century, Internet, Phenotype, Databases, Chemical history, Toxicogenetics history
- Abstract
Ten years ago, the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD; http://ctdbase.org/) was developed out of a need to formalize, harmonize and centralize the information on numerous genes and proteins responding to environmental toxic agents across diverse species. CTD's initial approach was to facilitate comparisons of nucleotide and protein sequences of toxicologically significant genes by curating these sequences and electronically annotating them with chemical terms from their associated references. Since then, however, CTD has vastly expanded its scope to robustly represent a triad of chemical-gene, chemical-disease and gene-disease interactions that are manually curated from the scientific literature by professional biocurators using controlled vocabularies, ontologies and structured notation. Today, CTD includes 24 million toxicogenomic connections relating chemicals/drugs, genes/proteins, diseases, taxa, phenotypes, Gene Ontology annotations, pathways and interaction modules. In this 10th year anniversary update, we outline the evolution of CTD, including our increased data content, new 'Pathway View' visualization tool, enhanced curation practices, pilot chemical-phenotype results and impending exposure data set. The prototype database originally described in our first report has transformed into a sophisticated resource used actively today to help scientists develop and test hypotheses about the etiologies of environmentally influenced diseases., (© The Author(s) 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.)
- Published
- 2015
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30. A CTD-Pfizer collaboration: manual curation of 88,000 scientific articles text mined for drug-disease and drug-phenotype interactions.
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Davis AP, Wiegers TC, Roberts PM, King BL, Lay JM, Lennon-Hopkins K, Sciaky D, Johnson R, Keating H, Greene N, Hernandez R, McConnell KJ, Enayetallah AE, and Mattingly CJ
- Subjects
- Disease, Humans, Phenotype, Cooperative Behavior, Data Mining, Databases, Factual, Drug Industry, Pharmaceutical Preparations metabolism, Publications, Toxicogenetics
- Abstract
Improving the prediction of chemical toxicity is a goal common to both environmental health research and pharmaceutical drug development. To improve safety detection assays, it is critical to have a reference set of molecules with well-defined toxicity annotations for training and validation purposes. Here, we describe a collaboration between safety researchers at Pfizer and the research team at the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD) to text mine and manually review a collection of 88,629 articles relating over 1,200 pharmaceutical drugs to their potential involvement in cardiovascular, neurological, renal and hepatic toxicity. In 1 year, CTD biocurators curated 254,173 toxicogenomic interactions (152,173 chemical-disease, 58,572 chemical-gene, 5,345 gene-disease and 38,083 phenotype interactions). All chemical-gene-disease interactions are fully integrated with public CTD, and phenotype interactions can be downloaded. We describe Pfizer's text-mining process to collate the articles, and CTD's curation strategy, performance metrics, enhanced data content and new module to curate phenotype information. As well, we show how data integration can connect phenotypes to diseases. This curation can be leveraged for information about toxic endpoints important to drug safety and help develop testable hypotheses for drug-disease events. The availability of these detailed, contextualized, high-quality annotations curated from seven decades' worth of the scientific literature should help facilitate new mechanistic screening assays for pharmaceutical compound survival. This unique partnership demonstrates the importance of resource sharing and collaboration between public and private entities and underscores the complementary needs of the environmental health science and pharmaceutical communities. Database URL: http://ctdbase.org/
- Published
- 2013
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31. Text mining effectively scores and ranks the literature for improving chemical-gene-disease curation at the comparative toxicogenomics database.
- Author
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Davis AP, Wiegers TC, Johnson RJ, Lay JM, Lennon-Hopkins K, Saraceni-Richards C, Sciaky D, Murphy CG, and Mattingly CJ
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Documentation, Humans, Metals, Heavy toxicity, Reproducibility of Results, Data Mining methods, Databases, Factual, Disease genetics, Molecular Sequence Annotation, Publications, Toxicogenetics
- Abstract
The Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD; http://ctdbase.org/) is a public resource that curates interactions between environmental chemicals and gene products, and their relationships to diseases, as a means of understanding the effects of environmental chemicals on human health. CTD provides a triad of core information in the form of chemical-gene, chemical-disease, and gene-disease interactions that are manually curated from scientific articles. To increase the efficiency, productivity, and data coverage of manual curation, we have leveraged text mining to help rank and prioritize the triaged literature. Here, we describe our text-mining process that computes and assigns each article a document relevancy score (DRS), wherein a high DRS suggests that an article is more likely to be relevant for curation at CTD. We evaluated our process by first text mining a corpus of 14,904 articles triaged for seven heavy metals (cadmium, cobalt, copper, lead, manganese, mercury, and nickel). Based upon initial analysis, a representative subset corpus of 3,583 articles was then selected from the 14,094 articles and sent to five CTD biocurators for review. The resulting curation of these 3,583 articles was analyzed for a variety of parameters, including article relevancy, novel data content, interaction yield rate, mean average precision, and biological and toxicological interpretability. We show that for all measured parameters, the DRS is an effective indicator for scoring and improving the ranking of literature for the curation of chemical-gene-disease information at CTD. Here, we demonstrate how fully incorporating text mining-based DRS scoring into our curation pipeline enhances manual curation by prioritizing more relevant articles, thereby increasing data content, productivity, and efficiency.
- Published
- 2013
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- View/download PDF
32. The Comparative Toxicogenomics Database: update 2013.
- Author
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Davis AP, Murphy CG, Johnson R, Lay JM, Lennon-Hopkins K, Saraceni-Richards C, Sciaky D, King BL, Rosenstein MC, Wiegers TC, and Mattingly CJ
- Subjects
- Computer Graphics, Disease genetics, Internet, Software, Databases, Chemical, Toxicogenetics
- Abstract
The Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD; http://ctdbase.org/) provides information about interactions between environmental chemicals and gene products and their relationships to diseases. Chemical-gene, chemical-disease and gene-disease interactions manually curated from the literature are integrated to generate expanded networks and predict many novel associations between different data types. CTD now contains over 15 million toxicogenomic relationships. To navigate this sea of data, we added several new features, including DiseaseComps (which finds comparable diseases that share toxicogenomic profiles), statistical scoring for inferred gene-disease and pathway-chemical relationships, filtering options for several tools to refine user analysis and our new Gene Set Enricher (which provides biological annotations that are enriched for gene sets). To improve data visualization, we added a Cytoscape Web view to our ChemComps feature, included color-coded interactions and created a 'slim list' for our MEDIC disease vocabulary (allowing diseases to be grouped for meta-analysis, visualization and better data management). CTD continues to promote interoperability with external databases by providing content and cross-links to their sites. Together, this wealth of expanded chemical-gene-disease data, combined with novel ways to analyze and view content, continues to help users generate testable hypotheses about the molecular mechanisms of environmental diseases.
- Published
- 2013
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33. Targeted journal curation as a method to improve data currency at the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database.
- Author
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Davis AP, Johnson RJ, Lennon-Hopkins K, Sciaky D, Rosenstein MC, Wiegers TC, and Mattingly CJ
- Subjects
- Environmental Health, Genes, Humans, Molecular Sequence Annotation, Data Mining methods, Databases, Genetic, Periodicals as Topic, Toxicogenetics
- Abstract
The Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD) is a public resource that promotes understanding about the effects of environmental chemicals on human health. CTD biocurators read the scientific literature and manually curate a triad of chemical-gene, chemical-disease and gene-disease interactions. Typically, articles for CTD are selected using a chemical-centric approach by querying PubMed to retrieve a corpus containing the chemical of interest. Although this technique ensures adequate coverage of knowledge about the chemical (i.e. data completeness), it does not necessarily reflect the most current state of all toxicological research in the community at large (i.e. data currency). Keeping databases current with the most recent scientific results, as well as providing a rich historical background from legacy articles, is a challenging process. To address this issue of data currency, CTD designed and tested a journal-centric approach of curation to complement our chemical-centric method. We first identified priority journals based on defined criteria. Next, over 7 weeks, three biocurators reviewed 2425 articles from three consecutive years (2009-2011) of three targeted journals. From this corpus, 1252 articles contained relevant data for CTD and 52 752 interactions were manually curated. Here, we describe our journal selection process, two methods of document delivery for the biocurators and the analysis of the resulting curation metrics, including data currency, and both intra-journal and inter-journal comparisons of research topics. Based on our results, we expect that curation by select journals can (i) be easily incorporated into the curation pipeline to complement our chemical-centric approach; (ii) build content more evenly for chemicals, genes and diseases in CTD (rather than biasing data by chemicals-of-interest); (iii) reflect developing areas in environmental health and (iv) improve overall data currency for chemicals, genes and diseases. Database URL: http://ctdbase.org/
- Published
- 2012
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34. Cultured human fibroblasts express constitutive IL-16 mRNA: cytokine induction of active IL-16 protein synthesis through a caspase-3-dependent mechanism.
- Author
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Sciaky D, Brazer W, Center DM, Cruikshank WW, and Smith TJ
- Subjects
- Caspase 3, Caspases metabolism, Cells, Cultured, Chemotaxis, Leukocyte immunology, Enzyme Activation immunology, Fibroblasts enzymology, Fibroblasts immunology, Humans, Inflammation Mediators pharmacology, Interleukin-1 pharmacology, Lymphocytes immunology, Lymphokines pharmacology, Organ Specificity genetics, Organ Specificity immunology, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha pharmacology, Caspases physiology, Cytokines pharmacology, Fibroblasts metabolism, Interleukin-16 biosynthesis, Interleukin-16 genetics, RNA, Messenger biosynthesis
- Abstract
Human fibroblasts can express numerous regulatory molecules that influence immune function. IL-16, a ligand for CD4, is a chemoattractant molecule expressed by lymphocytes, eosinophils, mast cells, and lung epithelium. It appears that the sole target for IL-16 is the CD4-bearing cell. Here we demonstrate that fibroblasts from several tissues can express IL-16 mRNA and protein as well as IL-16-dependent chemoattractant activity. The transcript is expressed abundantly under basal culture conditions as a 2.5-kb band on Northern analysis, similar to that observed in lymphocytes. IL-16 protein and activity are undetectable in fibroblast cultures under these same control conditions. However, when treated with proinflammatory cytokines such as IL-1beta, they express very high levels of IL-16 protein and chemoattractant activity, a substantial component of which can be blocked with IL-16-neutralizing Abs. The amount of IL-16 protein released into the medium is 3- to 4-fold greater, on a per cell basis, than that observed in lymphocytes. The induction of IL-16 protein by IL-1beta can be attenuated with specific inhibition of caspase-3, which could be detected in IL-1beta-treated fibroblasts. IL-1beta also induces RANTES mRNA, protein, and activity, and most of the chemoattractant activity released from fibroblasts not derived from IL-16 can be attributed to RANTES. Human fibroblasts appear to be an important source of IL-16 and through expression of this molecule may have key roles in the recruitment of CD4+ cells to sites of inflammation. IL-16 expression and the mechanism involved in its regulation appear to be cell type specific.
- Published
- 2000
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35. CD40 expression in human thyroid tissue: evidence for involvement of multiple cell types in autoimmune and neoplastic diseases.
- Author
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Smith TJ, Sciaky D, Phipps RP, and Jennings TA
- Subjects
- Humans, Immunohistochemistry, RNA, Messenger biosynthesis, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, Thyroid Gland pathology, Thyroid Neoplasms immunology, Thyroid Neoplasms pathology, Thyroidectomy, Thyroiditis, Autoimmune immunology, Thyroiditis, Autoimmune pathology, CD40 Antigens biosynthesis, Thyroid Gland cytology, Thyroid Gland metabolism, Thyroid Neoplasms metabolism, Thyroiditis, Autoimmune metabolism
- Abstract
CD40, a member of the tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) receptor family of surface molecules, is expressed by a variety of cell types. It is a crucial activational molecule displayed by lymphocytes and other bone marrow-derived cells and recently has also been found on nonlymphoid cells such as fibroblasts, endothelia, and epithelial cells in culture. While its role in lymphocyte signaling and activation has been examined in great detail, the function of CD40 expression on nonlymphoid cells, especially in vivo, is not yet understood. Most of the studies thus far have been conducted in cell culture. In this article, we report that several cell types resident in thyroid tissue in vivo can display CD40 under pathological conditions. Sections from a total of 46 different cases were examined immunohistochemically and included nodular hyperplasia, chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis, diffuse hyperplasia, follicular neoplasia, papillary carcinoma, and medullary carcinoma. Thyroid epithelial cells, lymphocytes, macrophages, endothelial cells, and spindle-shape fibroblast-like cells were found to stain positively in the context of inflammation. The staining pattern observed in all cell types was entirely membranous. In general, epithelial staining was limited to that adjacent to lymphocytic infiltration except in 5 of 17 cases of neoplasia and in diffuse hyperplasia. Moreover, we were able to detect CD40 mRNA by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in human thyroid tissue. These results constitute convincing evidence for expression of CD40 in nonlymphocytic elements of the human thyroid gland. Our findings suggest a potentially important pathway that might be of relevance to the pathogenesis of thyroid diseases. They imply the potential participation of the CD40/CD40 ligand bridge in the cross-talk between resident thyroid cells and bone marrow-derived cells recruited to the thyroid.
- Published
- 1999
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36. Cytokine-mediated PGE2 expression in human colonic fibroblasts.
- Author
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Kim EC, Zhu Y, Andersen V, Sciaky D, Cao HJ, Meekins H, Smith TJ, and Lance P
- Subjects
- Cell Line, Colon cytology, Colon drug effects, Colonic Neoplasms pathology, Cyclooxygenase 1, Cyclooxygenase 2, Cytokines physiology, Enzyme Induction, Fibroblasts metabolism, Humans, Interleukin-1 pharmacology, Intestinal Mucosa cytology, Intestinal Mucosa drug effects, Isoenzymes genetics, Kinetics, Membrane Proteins, Prostaglandin-Endoperoxide Synthases genetics, RNA, Messenger genetics, Transcription, Genetic drug effects, Tumor Cells, Cultured, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha pharmacology, Colon metabolism, Colonic Neoplasms metabolism, Cytokines pharmacology, Dinoprostone metabolism, Intestinal Mucosa metabolism, Isoenzymes biosynthesis, Prostaglandin-Endoperoxide Synthases biosynthesis
- Abstract
We investigated prostanoid biogenesis in human colonic fibroblasts (CCD-18Co and 5 primary fibroblast cultures) and epithelial cell lines (NCM460, T84, HT-29, and LS 174T) and the effect of PGE2 on fibroblast morphology. Cytokine-stimulated PGE2 production was measured. PGH synthase-1 and -2 (PGHS-1 and -2) protein and mRNA expression were evaluated. Basal PGE2 levels were low in all cell types (0.15-6.47 ng/mg protein). Treatment for 24 h with interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta; 10 ng/ml) or tumor necrosis factor-alpha (50 ng/ml), respectively, elicited maximal 25- and 6-fold inductions of PGE2 synthesis in CCD-18Co cultures and similar results in primary fibroblast cultures; maximal inductions with IL-1beta in colonic epithelial cell lines were from zero to fivefold. Treatment of CCD-18Co fibroblasts with IL-1beta caused maximal 21- and 53-fold increases, respectively, in PGHS-2 protein and mRNA levels without altering PGHS-1 expression. PGE2 (0.1 micromol/l) elicited a dramatic shape change in selected fibroblasts. Colonic fibroblasts are potentially important as cytokine targets and a source of and target for colonic prostanoids in vivo.
- Published
- 1998
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- View/download PDF
37. Leukoregulin induction of prostaglandin-endoperoxide H synthase-2 in human orbital fibroblasts. An in vitro model for connective tissue inflammation.
- Author
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Wang HS, Cao HJ, Winn VD, Rezanka LJ, Frobert Y, Evans CH, Sciaky D, Young DA, and Smith TJ
- Subjects
- Blotting, Northern, Blotting, Western, Cyclic AMP metabolism, Cycloheximide pharmacology, Dexamethasone pharmacology, Dinoprostone biosynthesis, Electrophoresis, Gel, Two-Dimensional, Enzyme Induction drug effects, Fibroblasts enzymology, Humans, Microscopy, Phase-Contrast, Mifepristone pharmacology, Orbit cytology, Prostaglandin-Endoperoxide Synthases genetics, Pyrazoles pharmacology, RNA, Messenger metabolism, Transcription, Genetic drug effects, Up-Regulation drug effects, Lymphokines pharmacology, Orbit enzymology, Prostaglandin-Endoperoxide Synthases biosynthesis
- Abstract
Several proinflammatory cytokines can increase prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) synthesis in a variety of cell types, constituting an important component of the inflammatory response. We demonstrate here that leukoregulin, a 50-kDa product of activated T lymphocytes, dramatically increases PGE2 synthesis in cultured human orbital fibroblasts. This up-regulation is mediated through an induction of prostaglandin-endoperoxide H synthase-2 (PGHS-2), the inflammatory cyclooxygenase. Steady-state levels of PGHS-2 mRNA are increased within 1.5 h of leukoregulin addition and are near maximal by 6 h, when they are 50-fold or higher above basal levels. The increase in PGHS-2 mRNA levels is partially blocked by cycloheximide, suggesting de novo synthesis of an intermediate protein may be required for a maximal leukoregulin response. Nuclear run-on studies indicate PGHS-2 gene transcription is up-regulated by leukoregulin 2-fold after 2 and 6 h. PGHS-2 protein, as assessed by Western blotting and two-dimensional protein gel analysis, is increased dramatically in orbital fibroblasts. This lymphokine-dependent expression of PGHS-2 is blocked by dexamethasone, and the increase in PGE2 and cAMP levels following leukoregulin treatment is also blocked by indomethacin and by SC 58125, a newly developed PGHS-2-selective cyclooxygenase inhibitor. The dramatic increase in cAMP levels causes marked alteration in orbital fibroblast morphology. PGHS-2 expression in dermal fibroblasts is also increased by leukoregulin; however, the response is considerably less robust, and these cells do not undergo a change in morphology. Both orbital and dermal fibroblasts express high levels of PGHS-1 mRNA and protein, the other abundant form of cyclooxygenase. In contrast to its effects on PGHS-2 expression, leukoregulin fails to alter PGHS-1 levels in either orbital or dermal fibroblasts, suggesting that PGHS-1 is not involved in cytokine-dependent prostanoid production in human fibroblasts. The increased PGHS-2 expression elicited by leukoregulin in orbital fibroblasts may be a consequence of both transcriptional and post-transcriptional effects. These observations help clarify the pathogenic mechanism relevant to the intense inflammation associated with Graves' ophthalmopathy. Lymphocytes trafficked to orbital tissues have a putative role, through the cytokines they release, in the activation of fibroblasts in this autoimmune disease.
- Published
- 1996
38. Mapping of guanylin to murine chromosome 4 and human chromosome 1p34-p35.
- Author
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Sciaky D, Jenkins NA, Gilbert DJ, Copeland NG, Sonoda G, Testa JR, and Cohen MB
- Subjects
- Animals, Crosses, Genetic, Humans, In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Muridae genetics, Natriuretic Peptides, Chromosome Mapping, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 1, Gastrointestinal Hormones, Genes, Mice genetics, Peptides genetics
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Genomic sequence of the murine guanylin gene.
- Author
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Sciaky D, Kosiba JL, and Cohen MB
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Base Sequence, Chromosome Mapping, Cloning, Molecular, DNA Primers genetics, DNA, Complementary genetics, Exons, Humans, Intestinal Mucosa metabolism, Mice, Molecular Sequence Data, Natriuretic Peptides, Promoter Regions, Genetic, RNA, Messenger genetics, RNA, Messenger metabolism, Rats, Transcription, Genetic, Gastrointestinal Hormones, Peptides genetics
- Abstract
Guanylin, a 15-amino-acid peptide, is an endogenous ligand of the intestinal receptor guanylate cyclase-C. After binding to this receptor, guanylin increases the intracellular concentration of cyclic GMP and induces chloride secretion. We have isolated a genomic clone containing the entire murine guanylin gene. The guanylin gene is composed of three exons that span 1700 bp. The first 133 nucleotides of upstream promoter sequence lack the canonical TATA, CAAT, and SP1 elements. Guanylin transcription is nearly exclusively limited to the intestine, and the presence of guanylin mRNA is greatest in the distal colon and ileum. Therefore, characterization of the guanylin promoter is likely to provide another paradigm for intestine-specific gene regulation.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The sequence of the tms transcript 2 locus of the A. tumefaciens plasmid pTiA6 and characterization of the mutation in pTiA66 that is responsible for auxin attenuation.
- Author
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Sciaky D and Thomashow MF
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Base Sequence, Coliphages genetics, Escherichia coli genetics, Nucleic Acid Conformation, Nucleic Acid Hybridization, Plant Tumors microbiology, Plants microbiology, Genes, Genes, Bacterial, Indoleacetic Acids metabolism, Mutation, Plant Growth Regulators metabolism, Plasmids, Rhizobium genetics, Transcription, Genetic
- Abstract
The incorporation of Ti plasmid sequences, the T-DNA, into the genomes of dicotyledenous plants causes the formation of tumors. Here we report the nucleotide sequence of one of the T-DNA "oncogenes", the transcript 2 gene of pTiA6 and we further characterize the 2.7 Kb element that has spontaneously inserted into this gene in plasmid pTiA66. The results indicate that the transcript 2 portion of the T-DNA has an open reading frame that could encode a polypeptide of 49.8 Kd. The open reading frame is surrounded by sequences that typically have roles in eucaryotic gene expression. Nucleotide sequence and Southern blot analysis also indicates that the 2.7 Kb insert in the transcript 2 gene of pTiA66 is located within the coding sequence of the gene and suggests that the element is an insertion sequence. We designate this element, IS66.
- Published
- 1984
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- View/download PDF
41. Variation in hormone autonomy and regenerative potential of cells transformed by strain A66 of Agrobacterium tumefaciens.
- Author
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Binns AN, Sciaky D, and Wood HN
- Subjects
- Cell Transformation, Neoplastic, Cloning, Molecular, DNA Restriction Enzymes, Mutation, Plant Physiological Phenomena, Plant Tumors microbiology, Plants, Toxic, Regeneration, Nicotiana genetics, Nicotiana physiology, DNA Transposable Elements, Plants genetics, Plasmids, Rhizobium genetics
- Abstract
Mutant Agrobacterium tumefaciens strain A66 is shown to differ from its wild-type progenitor (strain A6) by a spontaneous 2.7 kb DNA insert into the T-DNA region of its Ti plasmid. Tobacco stems transformed by A66 exhibit an attenuated response characterized by slow growth and shoot proliferation. Clonal analysis demonstrates that this response is due to an alteration in the growth and regenerative potential of transformed cells, rather than to variation in the frequency of fully autonomous cells within the primary tumor. Cloned A66 transformed tobacco cells exhibit an auxin requirement for growth that can be overcome by shoot proliferation. Other host species, however, may complement the A66 mutation yielding fully auxin-independent tumors when transformed by this bacterium.
- Published
- 1982
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42. Structure and synthesis of histopine, a histidine derivative produced by crown gall tumors.
- Author
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Bates HA, Kaushal A, Deng PN, and Sciaky D
- Subjects
- Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Histidine analysis, Histidine pharmacology, Rhizobium drug effects, Stereoisomerism, Histidine analogs & derivatives, Plant Tumors analysis
- Abstract
Histopine, an unusual amino acid derivative of histidine isolated from crown gall tumors of sunflowers (Helianthus annus) inoculated with Agrobacterium tumefaciens strain B6, was previously assigned the gross structure N-(1-carboxyethyl) histidine (2). A diastereomeric mixture containing histopine (2a and 2b) was readily prepared by reductive alkylation of (S)-histidine (1) with pyruvic acid and sodium cyanoborohydride. The individual diastereomers were prepared by reaction of (S)-histidine with (R)- and (S)-2-bromopropionic acid. (R)-N-(1-Carboxyethyl)-(S)-histidine (2a) supports the growth of A. tumefaciens whereas (S)-N-(1-carboxyethyl)-(S)-histidine (2b) is inactive. Therefore, we assign structure 2a to histopine.
- Published
- 1984
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- View/download PDF
43. A specific endonuclease from Bacillus caldolyticus.
- Author
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Bingham AH, Atkinson T, Sciaky D, and Roberts RJ
- Subjects
- DNA Restriction Enzymes metabolism, Substrate Specificity, Temperature, Bacillus enzymology, DNA Restriction Enzymes isolation & purification
- Abstract
The purification and characterization of a new restriction endonuclease, BclI from the extreme thermophile Bacillus caldolyticus is reported. This enzyme recognizes the sequence : formula: (see text) and cleaves at the positions indicated by the arrows.
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Fingerprints of Agrobacterium Ti plasmids.
- Author
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Sciaky D, Montoya AL, and Chilton MD
- Subjects
- Conjugation, Genetic, DNA Restriction Enzymes metabolism, Electrophoresis, Nucleic Acid Hybridization, Plant Tumors, Transformation, Genetic, DNA, Bacterial analysis, Plasmids, Rhizobium genetics
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Azide mutagnesis. In vitro studies.
- Author
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Kleinhofs A, Kleinschmidt M, Sciaky D, and Von Broembsen S
- Subjects
- Bacillus subtilis drug effects, Mutagens, Nucleic Acid Denaturation, Azides pharmacology, DNA Repair drug effects, Mutation drug effects, Transformation, Genetic drug effects
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Stable incorporation of plasmid DNA into higher plant cells: the molecular basis of crown gall tumorigenesis.
- Author
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Chilton MD, Drummond MH, Merio DJ, Sciaky D, Montoya AL, Gordon MP, and Nester EW
- Subjects
- Base Sequence, DNA Restriction Enzymes metabolism, DNA, Bacterial analysis, DNA, Neoplasm analysis, Molecular Weight, Nucleic Acid Hybridization, Plant Tumors analysis, Plants metabolism, Rhizobium analysis, DNA, Bacterial metabolism, DNA, Neoplasm biosynthesis, Extrachromosomal Inheritance, Plant Tumors etiology, Plasmids, Rhizobium metabolism
- Published
- 1977
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