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      KOBAS 2.0: a web server for annotation and identification of enriched pathways and diseases.

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          Abstract

          High-throughput experimental technologies often identify dozens to hundreds of genes related to, or changed in, a biological or pathological process. From these genes one wants to identify biological pathways that may be involved and diseases that may be implicated. Here, we report a web server, KOBAS 2.0, which annotates an input set of genes with putative pathways and disease relationships based on mapping to genes with known annotations. It allows for both ID mapping and cross-species sequence similarity mapping. It then performs statistical tests to identify statistically significantly enriched pathways and diseases. KOBAS 2.0 incorporates knowledge across 1327 species from 5 pathway databases (KEGG PATHWAY, PID, BioCyc, Reactome and Panther) and 5 human disease databases (OMIM, KEGG DISEASE, FunDO, GAD and NHGRI GWAS Catalog). KOBAS 2.0 can be accessed at http://kobas.cbi.pku.edu.cn.

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          Most cited references25

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          Controlling the False Discovery Rate: A Practical and Powerful Approach to Multiple Testing

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            Genomic sequencing has made it clear that a large fraction of the genes specifying the core biological functions are shared by all eukaryotes. Knowledge of the biological role of such shared proteins in one organism can often be transferred to other organisms. The goal of the Gene Ontology Consortium is to produce a dynamic, controlled vocabulary that can be applied to all eukaryotes even as knowledge of gene and protein roles in cells is accumulating and changing. To this end, three independent ontologies accessible on the World-Wide Web (http://www.geneontology.org) are being constructed: biological process, molecular function and cellular component.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Nucleic Acids Res
                Nucleic acids research
                Oxford University Press (OUP)
                1362-4962
                0305-1048
                Jul 2011
                : 39
                : Web Server issue
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Center for Bioinformatics, State Key Laboratory of Protein and Plant Gene Research, College of Life Sciences, Peking University, Beijing, China.
                Article
                gkr483
                10.1093/nar/gkr483
                3125809
                21715386
                671b6c8c-b969-41fd-a347-7564378625d7
                History

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