Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

The Monarch Initiative: an integrative data and analytic platform connecting phenotypes to genotypes across species

2016; Oxford University Press; Volume: 45; Issue: D1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1093/nar/gkw1128

ISSN

1362-4962

Autores

Chris Mungall, Julie A. McMurry, Sebastian Köhler, James P. Balhoff, Charles Borromeo, Matthew Brush, Seth Carbon, Tom Conlin, Nathan Dunn, Mark Engelstad, Erin D. Foster, Jean-Philippe F. Gourdine, Julius O.B. Jacobsen, Dan Keith, Bryan Laraway, Suzanna Lewis, Jeremy Nguyen-Xuan, Kent Shefchek, Nicole Vasilevsky, Zhou Yuan, Nicole L. Washington, Harry Hochheiser, Tudor Groza, Damian Smedley, Peter N. Robinson, Melissa Haendel,

Tópico(s)

Bioinformatics and Genomic Networks

Resumo

The correlation of phenotypic outcomes with genetic variation and environmental factors is a core pursuit in biology and biomedicine. Numerous challenges impede our progress: patient phenotypes may not match known diseases, candidate variants may be in genes that have not been characterized, model organisms may not recapitulate human or veterinary diseases, filling evolutionary gaps is difficult, and many resources must be queried to find potentially significant genotype–phenotype associations. Non-human organisms have proven instrumental in revealing biological mechanisms. Advanced informatics tools can identify phenotypically relevant disease models in research and diagnostic contexts. Large-scale integration of model organism and clinical research data can provide a breadth of knowledge not available from individual sources and can provide contextualization of data back to these sources. The Monarch Initiative (monarchinitiative.org) is a collaborative, open science effort that aims to semantically integrate genotype–phenotype data from many species and sources in order to support precision medicine, disease modeling, and mechanistic exploration. Our integrated knowledge graph, analytic tools, and web services enable diverse users to explore relationships between phenotypes and genotypes across species.

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