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Xenbase: Facilitating the Use of Xenopus to Model Human Disease

At a fundamental level most genes, signaling pathways, biological functions and organ systems are highly conserved between man and all vertebrate species. Leveraging this conservation, researchers are increasingly using the experimental advantages of the amphibian Xenopus to model human disease. The...

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Autores principales: Nenni, Mardi J., Fisher, Malcolm E., James-Zorn, Christina, Pells, Troy J., Ponferrada, Virgilio, Chu, Stanley, Fortriede, Joshua D., Burns, Kevin A., Wang, Ying, Lotay, Vaneet S., Wang, Dong Zhou, Segerdell, Erik, Chaturvedi, Praneet, Karimi, Kamran, Vize, Peter D., Zorn, Aaron M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6399412/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30863320
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2019.00154
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author Nenni, Mardi J.
Fisher, Malcolm E.
James-Zorn, Christina
Pells, Troy J.
Ponferrada, Virgilio
Chu, Stanley
Fortriede, Joshua D.
Burns, Kevin A.
Wang, Ying
Lotay, Vaneet S.
Wang, Dong Zhou
Segerdell, Erik
Chaturvedi, Praneet
Karimi, Kamran
Vize, Peter D.
Zorn, Aaron M.
author_facet Nenni, Mardi J.
Fisher, Malcolm E.
James-Zorn, Christina
Pells, Troy J.
Ponferrada, Virgilio
Chu, Stanley
Fortriede, Joshua D.
Burns, Kevin A.
Wang, Ying
Lotay, Vaneet S.
Wang, Dong Zhou
Segerdell, Erik
Chaturvedi, Praneet
Karimi, Kamran
Vize, Peter D.
Zorn, Aaron M.
author_sort Nenni, Mardi J.
collection PubMed
description At a fundamental level most genes, signaling pathways, biological functions and organ systems are highly conserved between man and all vertebrate species. Leveraging this conservation, researchers are increasingly using the experimental advantages of the amphibian Xenopus to model human disease. The online Xenopus resource, Xenbase, enables human disease modeling by curating the Xenopus literature published in PubMed and integrating these Xenopus data with orthologous human genes, anatomy, and more recently with links to the Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man resource (OMIM) and the Human Disease Ontology (DO). Here we review how Xenbase supports disease modeling and report on a meta-analysis of the published Xenopus research providing an overview of the different types of diseases being modeled in Xenopus and the variety of experimental approaches being used. Text mining of over 50,000 Xenopus research articles imported into Xenbase from PubMed identified approximately 1,000 putative disease- modeling articles. These articles were manually assessed and annotated with disease ontologies, which were then used to classify papers based on disease type. We found that Xenopus is being used to study a diverse array of disease with three main experimental approaches: cell-free egg extracts to study fundamental aspects of cellular and molecular biology, oocytes to study ion transport and channel physiology and embryo experiments focused on congenital diseases. We integrated these data into Xenbase Disease Pages to allow easy navigation to disease information on external databases. Results of this analysis will equip Xenopus researchers with a suite of experimental approaches available to model or dissect a pathological process. Ideally clinicians and basic researchers will use this information to foster collaborations necessary to interrogate the development and treatment of human diseases.
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spelling pubmed-63994122019-03-12 Xenbase: Facilitating the Use of Xenopus to Model Human Disease Nenni, Mardi J. Fisher, Malcolm E. James-Zorn, Christina Pells, Troy J. Ponferrada, Virgilio Chu, Stanley Fortriede, Joshua D. Burns, Kevin A. Wang, Ying Lotay, Vaneet S. Wang, Dong Zhou Segerdell, Erik Chaturvedi, Praneet Karimi, Kamran Vize, Peter D. Zorn, Aaron M. Front Physiol Physiology At a fundamental level most genes, signaling pathways, biological functions and organ systems are highly conserved between man and all vertebrate species. Leveraging this conservation, researchers are increasingly using the experimental advantages of the amphibian Xenopus to model human disease. The online Xenopus resource, Xenbase, enables human disease modeling by curating the Xenopus literature published in PubMed and integrating these Xenopus data with orthologous human genes, anatomy, and more recently with links to the Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man resource (OMIM) and the Human Disease Ontology (DO). Here we review how Xenbase supports disease modeling and report on a meta-analysis of the published Xenopus research providing an overview of the different types of diseases being modeled in Xenopus and the variety of experimental approaches being used. Text mining of over 50,000 Xenopus research articles imported into Xenbase from PubMed identified approximately 1,000 putative disease- modeling articles. These articles were manually assessed and annotated with disease ontologies, which were then used to classify papers based on disease type. We found that Xenopus is being used to study a diverse array of disease with three main experimental approaches: cell-free egg extracts to study fundamental aspects of cellular and molecular biology, oocytes to study ion transport and channel physiology and embryo experiments focused on congenital diseases. We integrated these data into Xenbase Disease Pages to allow easy navigation to disease information on external databases. Results of this analysis will equip Xenopus researchers with a suite of experimental approaches available to model or dissect a pathological process. Ideally clinicians and basic researchers will use this information to foster collaborations necessary to interrogate the development and treatment of human diseases. Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-02-26 /pmc/articles/PMC6399412/ /pubmed/30863320 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2019.00154 Text en Copyright © 2019 Nenni, Fisher, James-Zorn, Pells, Ponferrada, Chu, Fortriede, Burns, Wang, Lotay, Wang, Segerdell, Chaturvedi, Karimi, Vize and Zorn. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Physiology
Nenni, Mardi J.
Fisher, Malcolm E.
James-Zorn, Christina
Pells, Troy J.
Ponferrada, Virgilio
Chu, Stanley
Fortriede, Joshua D.
Burns, Kevin A.
Wang, Ying
Lotay, Vaneet S.
Wang, Dong Zhou
Segerdell, Erik
Chaturvedi, Praneet
Karimi, Kamran
Vize, Peter D.
Zorn, Aaron M.
Xenbase: Facilitating the Use of Xenopus to Model Human Disease
title Xenbase: Facilitating the Use of Xenopus to Model Human Disease
title_full Xenbase: Facilitating the Use of Xenopus to Model Human Disease
title_fullStr Xenbase: Facilitating the Use of Xenopus to Model Human Disease
title_full_unstemmed Xenbase: Facilitating the Use of Xenopus to Model Human Disease
title_short Xenbase: Facilitating the Use of Xenopus to Model Human Disease
title_sort xenbase: facilitating the use of xenopus to model human disease
topic Physiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6399412/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30863320
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2019.00154
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