Open Access
Nucleic Acids Research, volume 43, issue D1, pages D110-D116
The TTSMI database: a catalog of triplex target DNA sites associated with genes and regulatory elements in the human genome
Piroon Jenjaroenpun
1
,
Chee Siang Chew
2
,
Tai Pang Yong
2
,
Kiattawee Choowongkomon
3
,
Wimada Thammasorn
4
,
VLADIMIR A. KUZNETSOV
5
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2014-10-16
Journal:
Nucleic Acids Research
scimago Q1
SJR: 7.048
CiteScore: 27.1
Impact factor: 16.6
ISSN: 03051048, 13624962
PubMed ID:
25324314
Genetics
Abstract
A triplex target DNA site (TTS), a stretch of DNA that is composed of polypurines, is able to form a triple-helix (triplex) structure with triplex-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) and is able to influence the site-specific modulation of gene expression and/or the modification of genomic DNA. The co-localization of a genomic TTS with gene regulatory signals and functional genome structures suggests that TFOs could potentially be exploited in antigene strategies for the therapy of cancers and other genetic diseases. Here, we present the TTS Mapping and Integration (TTSMI; http://ttsmi.bii.a-star.edu.sg) database, which provides a catalog of unique TTS locations in the human genome and tools for analyzing the co-localization of TTSs with genomic regulatory sequences and signals that were identified using next-generation sequencing techniques and/or predicted by computational models. TTSMI was designed as a user-friendly tool that facilitates (i) fast searching/filtering of TTSs using several search terms and criteria associated with sequence stability and specificity, (ii) interactive filtering of TTSs that co-localize with gene regulatory signals and non-B DNA structures, (iii) exploration of dynamic combinations of the biological signals of specific TTSs and (iv) visualization of a TTS simultaneously with diverse annotation tracks via the UCSC genome browser.
Found
Are you a researcher?
Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.