Alzheimer's Disease and Reconstruction of Networks
2
0
Entering edit mode
7.8 years ago
aaaburak20 • 0

I am just experiencing an internship in a Bioinformatics and Medical informatics laboratory. I am doing some studies about alzheimer's disease.

I have about 250 genes which are told to be related with AD. I got these genes from different network databases from different networks. I want to reconstruct new networks with these genes but there are lots of genes which are told to be related with the disease. How can I check these genes' level of relevancy with AD? So that I can decrease the number of genes that I will build new networks with.

gene • 1.9k views
ADD COMMENT
5
Entering edit mode
7.8 years ago
Denise CS ★ 5.2k

Check the data in the Open Targets Platform. You can search either search for the disease entity (i.e. Alzheimers disease) or the genes you've got. The association between diseases and genes in this platform is based on integrating evidence from different databases including the GWAS catalog (suggested by Floris Brenk), UniProt, Reactome (biological pathways), Europe PMC (for text mining), animal models. The current version of our platform lists 271 genes associated with that Alzheimers taking into account genetic variants only (from GWAS, UniProt and EVA). You can filter those very easily for example to show associations based on UniProt data which gives you one gene, SORL1, or EVA which gives you five genes including the well known APOE. The platform provides you with an association score for all pieces of evidence combined. The gene with the highest association based on this integrated data is PSEN1. You can then explore PSEN1 itself such as view the protein structure of its translation For more details, check our 'Platform documentation' page.

ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode

so, I can decide for a specific threshold for the scores that this platform gives for each gene for the disease and decide which genes are more relavant with Alzheimer's. How can I see the references for each gene's scores?

ADD REPLY
0
Entering edit mode

You can look at the evidence for each gene from which we derive the scores, and see references if they are available. For PSEN1 this is the evidence we've got for the association with AD. Explore the different pieces of evidence, e.g. Genetic associations and get the references from there. Does this make sense?

ADD REPLY
0
Entering edit mode

this makes sense, thanks for your help!

ADD REPLY
2
Entering edit mode
7.8 years ago
Floris Brenk ★ 1.0k

GWAS -> http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24162737 is a way...

ADD COMMENT

Login before adding your answer.

Traffic: 1658 users visited in the last hour
Help About
FAQ
Access RSS
API
Stats

Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy.

Powered by the version 2.3.6