Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

BART Cancer: a web resource for transcriptional regulators in cancer genomes

View through CrossRef
Abstract Dysregulation of gene expression plays an important role in cancer development. Identifying transcriptional regulators, including transcription factors and chromatin regulators, that drive the oncogenic gene expression program is a critical task in cancer research. Genomic profiles of active transcriptional regulators from primary cancer samples are limited in the public domain. Here we present BART Cancer (bartcancer.org), an interactive web resource database to display the putative transcriptional regulators that are responsible for differentially regulated genes in 15 different cancer types in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). BART Cancer integrates over 10000 gene expression profiling RNA-seq datasets from TCGA with over 7000 ChIP-seq datasets from the Cistrome Data Browser database and the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO). BART Cancer uses Binding Analysis for Regulation of Transcription (BART) for predicting the transcriptional regulators from the differentially expressed genes in cancer samples compared to normal samples. BART Cancer also displays the activities of over 900 transcriptional regulators across cancer types, by integrating computational prediction results from BART and the Cistrome Cancer database. Focusing on transcriptional regulator activities in human cancers, BART Cancer can provide unique insights into epigenetics and transcriptional regulation in cancer, and is a useful data resource for genomics and cancer research communities.
Title: BART Cancer: a web resource for transcriptional regulators in cancer genomes
Description:
Abstract Dysregulation of gene expression plays an important role in cancer development.
Identifying transcriptional regulators, including transcription factors and chromatin regulators, that drive the oncogenic gene expression program is a critical task in cancer research.
Genomic profiles of active transcriptional regulators from primary cancer samples are limited in the public domain.
Here we present BART Cancer (bartcancer.
org), an interactive web resource database to display the putative transcriptional regulators that are responsible for differentially regulated genes in 15 different cancer types in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA).
BART Cancer integrates over 10000 gene expression profiling RNA-seq datasets from TCGA with over 7000 ChIP-seq datasets from the Cistrome Data Browser database and the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO).
BART Cancer uses Binding Analysis for Regulation of Transcription (BART) for predicting the transcriptional regulators from the differentially expressed genes in cancer samples compared to normal samples.
BART Cancer also displays the activities of over 900 transcriptional regulators across cancer types, by integrating computational prediction results from BART and the Cistrome Cancer database.
Focusing on transcriptional regulator activities in human cancers, BART Cancer can provide unique insights into epigenetics and transcriptional regulation in cancer, and is a useful data resource for genomics and cancer research communities.

Related Results

Transcriptional Regulation Underlying Long-term Sensitization in Aplysia
Transcriptional Regulation Underlying Long-term Sensitization in Aplysia
The final published article is available in the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Neuroscience: https://oxfordre.com/neuroscience/display/10.1093/acrefore/9780190264086.001.0001/acre...
Mediator kinase submodule-dependent regulation of cardiac transcription
Mediator kinase submodule-dependent regulation of cardiac transcription
<p>Pathological cardiac remodeling results from myocardial stresses including pressure and volume overload, neurohumoral activation, myocardial infarction, and hypothyroidism...
Abstract 1471: Genomic drivers differ across 33 tumor types, but factors regulating hallmarks of cancer are similar
Abstract 1471: Genomic drivers differ across 33 tumor types, but factors regulating hallmarks of cancer are similar
Abstract The unique complement of genes expressed in a given cell type modifies the response to a specific somatic mutation. Thus, each tumor type would present with...
Are Cervical Ribs Indicators of Childhood Cancer? A Narrative Review
Are Cervical Ribs Indicators of Childhood Cancer? A Narrative Review
Abstract A cervical rib (CR), also known as a supernumerary or extra rib, is an additional rib that forms above the first rib, resulting from the overgrowth of the transverse proce...
Edoxaban and Cancer-Associated Venous Thromboembolism: A Meta-analysis of Clinical Trials
Edoxaban and Cancer-Associated Venous Thromboembolism: A Meta-analysis of Clinical Trials
Abstract Introduction Cancer patients face a venous thromboembolism (VTE) risk that is up to 50 times higher compared to individuals without cancer. In 2010, direct oral anticoagul...
A flexible approach for variable selection in large-scale healthcare database studies with missing covariate and outcome data
A flexible approach for variable selection in large-scale healthcare database studies with missing covariate and outcome data
AbstractBackgroundPrior work has shown that combining bootstrap imputation with tree-based machine learning variable selection methods can provide good performances achievable on f...
Transcriptional Changes Fade Prior to Long-Term Memory for Sensitization of the Aplysia Siphon-Withdrawal Reflex
Transcriptional Changes Fade Prior to Long-Term Memory for Sensitization of the Aplysia Siphon-Withdrawal Reflex
Forming a long-term memory requires changes in neuronal transcription. What happens, though, as the memory is forgotten? And how does the transcriptional state relate to the main...

Back to Top