Abstract

The Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD) is a public resource that promotes understanding about the effects of environmental chemicals on human health. CTD biocurators manually curate a triad of chemical–gene, chemical–disease and gene–disease relationships from the scientific literature. The CTD curation paradigm uses controlled vocabularies for chemicals, genes and diseases. To curate disease information, CTD first had to identify a source of controlled terms. Two resources seemed to be good candidates: the Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM) and the ‘Diseases’ branch of the National Library of Medicine's Medical Subject Headers (MeSH). To maximize the advantages of both, CTD biocurators undertook a novel initiative to map the flat list of OMIM disease terms into the hierarchical nature of the MeSH vocabulary. The result is CTD’s ‘merged disease vocabulary’ (MEDIC), a unique resource that integrates OMIM terms, synonyms and identifiers with MeSH terms, synonyms, definitions, identifiers and hierarchical relationships. MEDIC is both a deep and broad vocabulary, composed of 9700 unique diseases described by more than 67 000 terms (including synonyms). It is freely available to download in various formats from CTD. While neither a true ontology nor a perfect solution, this vocabulary has nonetheless proved to be extremely successful and practical for our biocurators in generating over 2.5 million disease-associated toxicogenomic relationships in CTD. Other external databases have also begun to adopt MEDIC for their disease vocabulary. Here, we describe the construction, implementation, maintenance and use of MEDIC to raise awareness of this resource and to offer it as a putative scaffold in the formal construction of an official disease ontology.Database URL: http://ctd.mdibl.org/voc.go?type=disease

Highlights

  • Many diseases are the product of the interactions between genes and the environment

  • MEDIC is updated monthly, and the most recent version can be downloaded in CSV, TSV, XML or OBO format from: http://ctd.mdibl.org/downloads/#alldiseases

  • If you are interested in establishing links to Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD) data, please notify us and follow these instructions: http://ctd.mdibl.org/help/linking.jsp

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Summary

Introduction

Many diseases are the product of the interactions between genes and the environment. An important component of the environment is chemical exposure. 5400 genes to over 4600 disease terms.

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