| Literature DB >> 35207753 |
Houcemeddine Othman1, Lyndon Zass2, Jorge E B da Rocha1,3, Fouzia Radouani4, Chaimae Samtal5, Ichrak Benamri4,6, Judit Kumuthini7, Yasmina J Fakim8, Yosr Hamdi9,10, Nessrine Mezzi9,11, Maroua Boujemaa9, Chiamaka Jessica Okeke12, Maureen B Tendwa12, Kholoud Sanak4, Melek Chaouch13, Sumir Panji2, Rym Kefi9, Reem M Sallam14,15, Anisah W Ghoorah16, Lilia Romdhane9,11, Anmol Kiran17,18, Ayton P Meintjes2, Perceval Maturure2, Haifa Jmel9, Ayoub Ksouri19, Maryame Azzouzi4, Mohammed A Farahat20, Samah Ahmed21, Rania Sibira21, Michael E E Turkson22, Alfred Ssekagiri23, Ziyaad Parker2, Faisal M Fadlelmola21, Kais Ghedira13, Nicola Mulder2, Samar Kamal Kassim15,24.
Abstract
Genomics data are currently being produced at unprecedented rates, resulting in increased knowledge discovery and submission to public data repositories. Despite these advances, genomic information on African-ancestry populations remains significantly low compared with European- and Asian-ancestry populations. This information is typically segmented across several different biomedical data repositories, which often lack sufficient fine-grained structure and annotation to account for the diversity of African populations, leading to many challenges related to the retrieval, representation and findability of such information. To overcome these challenges, we developed the African Genomic Medicine Portal (AGMP), a database that contains metadata on genomic medicine studies conducted on African-ancestry populations. The metadata is curated from two public databases related to genomic medicine, PharmGKB and DisGeNET. The metadata retrieved from these source databases were limited to genomic variants that were associated with disease aetiology or treatment in the context of African-ancestry populations. Over 2000 variants relevant to populations of African ancestry were retrieved. Subsequently, domain experts curated and annotated additional information associated with the studies that reported the variants, including geographical origin, ethnolinguistic group, level of association significance and other relevant study information, such as study design and sample size, where available. The AGMP functions as a dedicated resource through which to access African-specific information on genomics as applied to health research, through querying variants, genes, diseases and drugs. The portal and its corresponding technical documentation, implementation code and content are publicly available.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; clinical genetics; database; genomic medicine; portal
Year: 2022 PMID: 35207753 PMCID: PMC8879570 DOI: 10.3390/jpm12020265
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pers Med ISSN: 2075-4426
Figure 1AGMP v1.0 pipeline for data mining, curation and cleaning.
Figure 2Screenshot of the search menu of the AGMP. Users can explore the data by querying diseases, drugs, variants and genes.
Figure 3Representation of African countries in AGMP. (A) The waffle plot shows the ratio of occurrence in the geographical location annotation data by African regions (North Africa, Southern Africa, East Africa, West Africa and Central Africa). The assignment of countries at regional representation was established according to the UN classification. The squares are arbitrary units of proportion. (B) Representation of countries according to the number of corresponding variants.
Figure 4Representation of therapeutic drug classes in AGMP. The total number of variant-drug response phenotype associations is given in the annotation boxes. The shading color levels represent the different classes to visually show the number of variants in the database.