Content | |
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Description | disease-annotated chromatin epigenetics resource. |
Contact | |
Research center | University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Laboratory | Hospital for Sick Children, Wodak Lab |
Authors | Andrei L Turinsky |
Primary citation | Turinsky & al. (2011)[1] |
Release date | 2010 |
Access | |
Website | http://wodaklab.org/dancer/ |
DAnCER (disease-annotated chromatin epigenetics resource) is a database for chromatin modifications and their relation to human disease.[1][2]
It was developed by the Wodak Lab at the Hospital for Sick Children.
It has been developed to serve as the core bioinformatics resource for seven experimental and bioinformatics laboratories working together to unravel the mechanisms of chromatin modifications and their relation to human disease. Since molecular networks are essential to the understanding of biological processes, this research effort strives to explore CM-related genes in the full context of protein complexes, gene-expression regulation and pathways. To gain additional insights into the CM process in human cells, it also explores patterns of evolutionary conservation across model organisms - from sequence, domain composition and 3D structure, to interaction patterns and regulatory mechanisms.
See also
References
- 1 2 Turinsky AL, Turner B, Borja RC, Gleeson JA, Heath M, Pu S, Switzer T, Dong D, Gong Y, On T, Xiong X, Emili A, Greenblatt J, Parkinson J, Zhang Z, Wodak SJ (January 2011). "DAnCER: disease-annotated chromatin epigenetics resource". Nucleic Acids Res. 39 (Database issue): D889–94. doi:10.1093/nar/gkq857. PMC 3013761. PMID 20876685.
- ↑ Galperin MY, Cochrane GR (January 2011). "The 2011 Nucleic Acids Research Database Issue and the online Molecular Biology Database Collection". Nucleic Acids Res. 39 (Database issue): D1–6. doi:10.1093/nar/gkq1243. PMC 3013748. PMID 21177655.
External links
- "Disease Annotated Chromatin Epigenetic Resource (DAnCER)". The Wodak Lab. Retrieved 2011-08-19.