Oncomine 3.0: genes, pathways, and networks in a collection of 18,000 cancer gene expression profiles

DR Rhodes, S Kalyana-Sundaram, V Mahavisno… - Neoplasia, 2007 - Elsevier
DR Rhodes, S Kalyana-Sundaram, V Mahavisno, R Varambally, J Yu, BB Briggs…
Neoplasia, 2007Elsevier
DNA microarrays have been widely applied to cancer transcriptome analysis; however, the
majority of such data are not easily accessible or comparable. Furthermore, several
important analytic approaches have been applied to microarray analysis; however, their
application is often limited. To overcome these limitations, we have developed Oncomine, a
bioinformatics initiative aimed at collecting, standardizing, analyzing, and delivering cancer
transcriptome data to the biomedical research community. Our analysis has identified the …
Abstract
DNA microarrays have been widely applied to cancer transcriptome analysis; however, the majority of such data are not easily accessible or comparable. Furthermore, several important analytic approaches have been applied to microarray analysis; however, their application is often limited. To overcome these limitations, we have developed Oncomine, a bioinformatics initiative aimed at collecting, standardizing, analyzing, and delivering cancer transcriptome data to the biomedical research community. Our analysis has identified the genes, pathways, and networks deregulated across 18,000 cancer gene expression microarrays, spanning the majority of cancer types and subtypes. Here, we provide an update on the initiative, describe the database and analysis modules, and highlight several notable observations. Results from this comprehensive analysis are available at http://www.oncomine.org.
Elsevier