4.8 Article

Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD): update 2021

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 49, Issue D1, Pages D1138-D1143

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkaa891

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences [R01 ES014065, R01 ES023788, P30 ES025128]

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The public Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD) is a digital ecosystem that integrates toxicological information to advance understanding about human health. With a 20% increase in curated content, CTD now provides an extensive dataset for over 16,300 chemicals, 51,300 genes, and more, enhancing its usefulness as a resource for generating testable hypotheses about environmentally influenced diseases.
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.

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