| Literature DB >> 32746900 |
Sanket G Shah1,2, Tushar Mandloi3, Pooja Kunte1,4, Abhiram Natu1,2, Mudasir Rashid1,2, Divya Reddy1,2,5, Nikhil Gadewal6, Sanjay Gupta7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Epigenetics research is progressing in basic, pre-clinical and clinical studies using various model systems. Hence, updating the knowledge and integration of biological data emerging from in silico, in vitro and in vivo studies for different epigenetic factors is essential. Moreover, new drugs are being discovered which target various epigenetic proteins, tested in pre-clinical studies, clinical trials and approved by the FDA. It brings distinct challenges as well as opportunities to update the existing HIstome database for implementing and applying enormous data for biomedical research.Entities:
Keywords: Enzymes; Epidrugs; Histones; PTMs
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32746900 PMCID: PMC7398201 DOI: 10.1186/s13072-020-00354-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epigenetics Chromatin ISSN: 1756-8935 Impact factor: 4.954
Fig. 1Schematic representation of the HISTome2 database: the information related to the different organisms, Homo sapiens, Rattus norvegicus, and Mus musculus is stored in tables like Histone, PTM, and Enzyme. Histone, PTM, and Enzyme table are linked by ‘Mod Code’ and EpiDrug contains Drug info and bioassay tables which are linked by ‘CID’
Fig. 2Representative image of histone entry page for Human: The individual entry has brief write-up for biological role, site-specific modifications and different content which are divided into uniport ID, synonym, number of coding genes, gene name, gene symbol, promoter region, gene ID, HGNC, Refseq mRNA, Refseq protein, TCGA expression and mIR targets for a specific histone
Fig. 3Representative image of epidrug ‘Zebularine’, a DNA methyltransferase inhibitor: the entry of ‘Zebularine’ epidrug is divided into multiple pieces of information like basic, structural, clinical, bioassay and references in the database
Fig. 4Representative image of sequence alignment of histone H3 proteins from human, mouse, and rat: the amino acids in ‘red’ color indicate identical residues in all proteins, ‘blue’ indicate amino acids substituted with similar properties among the queried proteins, while ‘black’ indicate amino acids with different properties among proteins. A ‘WebLogo’ is placed parallel below the alignment to highlight the relative frequency of occurrence