4.7 Article

Accessing an Expanded Exposure Science Module at the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES
卷 126, 期 1, 页码 -

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US DEPT HEALTH HUMAN SCIENCES PUBLIC HEALTH SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1289/EHP2873

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  1. NIEHS [ES014065, ES019604, ES023788, ES025128]
  2. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH SCIENCES [R01ES014065, P30ES025128, R01ES023788, R01ES019604] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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The Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CID; hap://ctdbase.org) is a free resource that provides manually curated information on chemical, gene, phenotype, and disease relationships to advance understanding of the effect of environmental exposures on human health. Four core content areas are independently created: chemical-gene interactions, chemical disease and gene disease associations, chemical-phenotype interactions, and environmental exposure data (e.g., effects of chemical stressors on humans). Since releasing exposure data in 2015, we have vastly increased our coverage of chemicals and disease/phenotype outcomes; greatly expanded access to exposure content; added search capability by stressors, cohorts, population demographics, and measured outcomes; and created user-specified displays of content. These enhancements aim to facilitate human studies by allowing comparisons among experimental parameters and across studies involving specified chemicals, populations, or outcomes. Integration of data among CTD's four content areas and external data sets, such as Gene Ontology annotations and pathway information, links exposure data with over 1.8 million chemical-gene, chemical-disease and gene-disease interactions. Our analysis tools reveal direct and inferred relationships among the data and provide opportunities to generate predictive connections between environmental exposures and population-level health outcomes. littps://doi.org/10.1289/EFIP2873

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