Projects per year
Abstract
Interactions between proteins are highly conserved
across species. As a result, the molecular basis of
multiple diseases affecting humans can be studied
in model organisms that offer many alternative
experimental opportunities. One such organism—
Caenorhabditis elegans—has been used to produce
much molecular quantitative genetics and systems
biology data over the past decade. We present
WormQTLHD (Human Disease), a database that quantitatively
and systematically links expression
Quantitative Trait Loci (eQTL) findings in C. elegans
to gene–disease associations in man. WormQTLHD,
available online at http://www.wormqtl-hd.org, is a
user-friendly set of tools to reveal functionally
coherent, evolutionary conserved gene networks.
These can be used to predict novel gene-to-gene associations
and the functions of genes underlying the
disease of interest. We created a new database that
links C. elegans eQTL data sets to human diseases
(34 337 gene–disease associations from OMIM, DGA,
GWAS Central and NHGRI GWAS Catalogue) based
on overlapping sets of orthologous genes associated
to phenotypes in these two species. We utilized QTL
results, high-throughput molecular phenotypes,
classical phenotypes and genotype data covering
different developmental stages and environments
from WormQTL database. All software is available
as open source, built on MOLGENIS and xQTL
workbench.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | D794-D801 |
Journal | Nucleic acids research |
Volume | 42 |
Issue number | D1 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2014 |
Keywords
- life-history traits
- caenorhabditis-elegans
- systems biology
- stress-response
- genotype
- genome
- qtl
- environment
- identification
- polymorphism
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Dive into the research topics of 'WormQTL HD—a web database for linking human disease to natural variation data in C. elegans'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
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PANACEA: Quantitative pathway analysis of natural variation in complex disease signaling in C. elegans
1/01/09 → 31/03/13
Project: EU research project