ICG: a wiki-driven knowledgebase of internal control genes for RT-qPCR normalization

Jian Sang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhennan Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Man Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jiabao Cao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Guangyi Niu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Lin Xia(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Dong Zou(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Fan Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xingjian Xu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xiaojiao Han(Chinese Academy of Forestry), Jinqi Fan(Yantai University), Ye Yang(Zhengzhou University), Wanzhu Zuo(Zhengzhou University), Yang Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Wenming Zhao(Beijing Institute of Genomics), Yīmíng Bào(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jingfa Xiao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Songnian Hu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Lili Hao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhang Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Nucleic Acids Research
September 23, 2017
Cited by 69Open Access
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Abstract

Real-time quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) has become a widely used method for accurate expression profiling of targeted mRNA and ncRNA. Selection of appropriate internal control genes for RT-qPCR normalization is an elementary prerequisite for reliable expression measurement. Here, we present ICG (http://icg.big.ac.cn), a wiki-driven knowledgebase for community curation of experimentally validated internal control genes as well as their associated experimental conditions. Unlike extant related databases that focus on qPCR primers in model organisms (mainly human and mouse), ICG features harnessing collective intelligence in community integration of internal control genes for a variety of species. Specifically, it integrates a comprehensive collection of more than 750 internal control genes for 73 animals, 115 plants, 12 fungi and 9 bacteria, and incorporates detailed information on recommended application scenarios corresponding to specific experimental conditions, which, collectively, are of great help for researchers to adopt appropriate internal control genes for their own experiments. Taken together, ICG serves as a publicly editable and open-content encyclopaedia of internal control genes and accordingly bears broad utility for reliable RT-qPCR normalization and gene expression characterization in both model and non-model organisms.


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