CiliaMiner: an integrated database for ciliopathy genes and ciliopathies
Özet
Cilia are found in eukaryotic species ranging from single-celled organisms, such as Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, to humans, but not
in plants. The ability to respond to repellents and/or attractants, regulate cell proliferation and differentiation and provide cellular
mobility are just a few examples of how crucial cilia are to cells and organisms. Over 30 distinct rare disorders generally known as
ciliopathy are caused by abnormalities or functional impairments in cilia and cilia-related compartments. Because of the complexity of
ciliopathies and the rising number of ciliopathies and ciliopathy genes, a ciliopathy-oriented and up-to-date database is required. Here,
we present CiliaMiner, a manually curated ciliopathy database that includes ciliopathy lists collected from articles and databases. Analysis reveals that there are 55 distinct disorders likely related to ciliopathy, with over 4000 clinical manifestations. Based on comparative
symptom analysis and subcellular localization data, diseases are classifed as primary, secondary or atypical ciliopathies. CiliaMiner
provides easy access to all of these diseases and disease genes, as well as clinical features and gene-specifc clinical features, as well
as subcellular localization of each protein. Additionally, the orthologs of disease genes are also provided for mice, zebrafsh, Xenopus,
Drosophila, Caenorhabditis elegans and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. CiliaMiner (https://kaplanlab.shinyapps.io/ciliaminer) aims to serve
the cilia community with its comprehensive content and highly enriched interactive heatmaps, and will be continually updated.