NONCODE v3.0: integrative annotation of long noncoding RNAs

Ding-fang Bu(Institute of Computing Technology), Keming Yu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Silong Sun(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Chaojie Xie(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Geir Skogerbø(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ruoyu Miao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Hua Xiao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Qiang Liao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Huanhuan Luo(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Guoguang Zhao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Huabiao Zhao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhanwei Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Chenli Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Runsheng Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yunjie Zhao(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Nucleic Acids Research
December 1, 2011
Cited by 417Open Access
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Abstract

Facilitated by the rapid progress of high-throughput sequencing technology, a large number of long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) have been identified in mammalian transcriptomes over the past few years. LncRNAs have been shown to play key roles in various biological processes such as imprinting control, circuitry controlling pluripotency and differentiation, immune responses and chromosome dynamics. Notably, a growing number of lncRNAs have been implicated in disease etiology. With the increasing number of published lncRNA studies, the experimental data on lncRNAs (e.g. expression profiles, molecular features and biological functions) have accumulated rapidly. In order to enable a systematic compilation and integration of this information, we have updated the NONCODE database (http://www.noncode.org) to version 3.0 to include the first integrated collection of expression and functional lncRNA data obtained from re-annotated microarray studies in a single database. NONCODE has a user-friendly interface with a variety of search or browse options, a local Genome Browser for visualization and a BLAST server for sequence-alignment search. In addition, NONCODE provides a platform for the ongoing collation of ncRNAs reported in the literature. All data in NONCODE are open to users, and can be downloaded through the website or obtained through the SOAP API and DAS services.


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