| Literature DB >> 19958500 |
Sungwoong Jho1, Byoung-Chul Kim, Ho Ghang, Ji-Han Kim, Daeui Park, Hak-Min Kim, Soo-young Jung, Ki-young Yoo, Hee-Jin Kim, Sunghoon Lee, Jong Bhak.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A disease-causing mutation refers to a heritable genetic change that is associated with a specific phenotype (disease). The detection of a mutation from a patient's sample is critical for the diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis of the disease. There are numerous databases and applications with which to archive mutation data. However, none of them have been implemented with any automated bioinformatics tools for mutation detection and analysis starting from raw data materials from patients. We present a Locus Specific mutation DB (LSDB) construction system that supports both mutation detection and deposition in one package.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19958500 PMCID: PMC2788389 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-10-S3-S35
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Figure 1Database structure. Database tables are classified into five parts: (A) account, (B) submitted data, (C) registered data, (D) gene information, and (E) known mutation data from public databases (HGMD, dbSNP).
Figure 2Report from the mutation candidate prediction system. (A) After query sequence analysis, this mutation candidate prediction system reports all query sequences, all mutation candidates, and diagrams of target gene locus with query sequence. In the gene region diagram, the top line represents a gene locus of a target gene, and the blue bar below the top line represents a mapped query sequence. The next two lines represent mRNAs in the target gene locus. The blue box is UTR regions, and the red box is coding regions. (B) The detailed information of selected query sequence is shown. The top line represents a gene locus of a target gene, the red bar represents coding region, the black arrow represents the mapped query sequence, and cyan boxes are mutation candidates. The mutation candidate table shows mutation type, chromosome position, and the existence of the mutation candidate in public databases. Nucleotide alignment and protein sequences of the query sequence are shown.
Figure 3Korean registry of hemophilia mutations (KoHemGene). (A) The KoHemGene system collects patient information using this submission page. (B) The mutation candidate prediction system on the KoHemGene site came from COMUS.