4.7 Article Data Paper

PTMD: A Database of Human Disease-associated Post-translational Modifications

Journal

GENOMICS PROTEOMICS & BIOINFORMATICS
Volume 16, Issue 4, Pages 244-251

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.gpb.2018.06.004

Keywords

Posttranslational modification; Phosphorylation; PTM-disease association; Disease-gene network; AKT1

Funding

  1. Special Project on Precision Medicine under the National Key R&D Program of China [2017YFC0906600, 2016YFC0903003]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of China [31671360, 81670462]
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [2017KFXKJC001]
  4. National Program for Support of Top-Notch Young Professionals
  5. program for HUST Academic Frontier Youth Team, China

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Various posttranslational modifications (PTMs) participate in nearly all aspects of biological processes by regulating protein functions, and aberrant states of PTMs are frequently implicated in human diseases. Therefore, an integral resource of PTM-disease associations (PDAs) would be a great help for both academic research and clinical use. In this work, we reported PTMD, a well-curated database containing PTMs that are associated with human diseases. We manually collected 1950 known PDAs in 749 proteins for 23 types of PTMs and 275 types of diseases from the literature. Database analyses show that phosphorylation has the largest number of disease associations, whereas neurologic diseases have the largest number of PTM associations. We classified all known PDAs into six classes according to the PTM status in diseases and demonstrated that the upregulation and presence of PTM events account for a predominant proportion of disease-associated PTM events. By reconstructing a disease-gene network, we observed that breast cancers have the largest number of associated PTMs and AKT1 has the largest number of PTMs connected to diseases. Finally, the PTMD database was developed with detailed annotations and can be a useful resource for further analyzing the relations between PTMs and human diseases. PTMD is freely accessible at http://ptmd.biocuckoo.org.

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