| Literature DB >> 31839973 |
Mayumi Kamada1, Masahiko Nakatsui1, Ryosuke Kojima1, Sachio Nohara2, Eiichiro Uchino1, Shigeki Tanishima2, Masaya Sugiyama3, Kenjiro Kosaki4, Katsushi Tokunaga5,6, Masashi Mizokami3, Yasushi Okuno1.
Abstract
To promote the implementation of genomic medicine, we developed an integrated database, the Medical Genomics Japan Variant Database (MGeND). In its first release, MGeND provides data regarding genomic variations in Japanese individuals, collected by research groups in five disease fields. These variations consist of curated SNV/INDEL variants and susceptibility variants for diseases established by genome-wide association study analysis. Furthermore, we recorded the frequencies of HLA alleles in infectious disease populations.Entities:
Keywords: Genetic databases; Genetic variation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31839973 PMCID: PMC6897987 DOI: 10.1038/s41439-019-0084-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genome Var ISSN: 2054-345X
Number of variants registered in MGeND as of 16 February 2019.
| Data type | Variants* | GWAS | HLA allele data |
|---|---|---|---|
| Disease field | |||
| Cancer | 16,685 (5550) | – | – |
| Rare/intractable disease | 2711 (1920) | – | – |
| Infectious disease | 19 (19) | 155,098 (754) | 1821 (841) |
| Hearing loss | 122 (122) | – | – |
| Dementia | 7682 (1669) APOE gene: 12,298 (5196) | 410 (410) | – |
The numbers within parentheses indicate the number of published variants. Variants that have not been released will be published when the date set by the submitter is approached. Based on the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED) data sharing policy, submitters can leave their data unpublished until 2 years after analysis is complete or until a journal regarding the variant is published
Fig. 1Graphical views of MGeND.
a The resulting view from a keyword search. The variants identified by the keyword search are listed with the original information in MGeND (clinical significance, the number of samples, and origin of cells) and with the information from public databases, which is often used for interpretation of variants. b The statistics for each gene or variant are provided. The statistics regarding disease name, sex, and age can be filtered in each disease field by clicking on the disease field name in the upper left graph. Full text of the disease name is shown by placing the cursor over the disease name at the left side of the bar.
Fig. 2Specific viewers for infectious diseases and dementia.
a The table viewer for the frequencies of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) alleles. The columns with blue headers are the HLA allele frequencies in patients and control samples for each study of the infectious disease group. The gray columns display the frequencies in the healthy control groups obtained from HLA Laboratory and National Center for Global Health and Medicine (NCGM) studies. b The graph for the genotype distribution of the APOE gene. The data used to draw these graphs can be filtered by factors such as sex, family history, and age of onset.