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Paper Details

Integration of the Drug-Gene Interaction Database (DGIdb 4.0) with open crowdsource efforts.
Nucleic Acids Res
389
2021
DGIdb, Drug-Gene, Wikidata, druggable genes, gene
Crowdsourcing, Databases, Chemical, Databases, Factual, Databases, Genetic, Drugs, Investigational, Genome, Human, Genotype, Humans, Internet, Knowledge Bases, Phenotype, Prescription Drugs, Software
Author NameAffiliation
Sharon L FreshourWashington University School of Medicine
Sharon L FreshourMcDonnell Genome Institute, Washington University School of Medicine
Susanna KiwalaMcDonnell Genome Institute, Washington University School of Medicine
Kelsy C CottoWashington University School of Medicine
Kelsy C CottoMcDonnell Genome Institute, Washington University School of Medicine
Adam C CoffmanMcDonnell Genome Institute, Washington University School of Medicine
Joshua F McMichaelMcDonnell Genome Institute, Washington University School of Medicine
Joshua F McMichaelMcDonnell Genome Institute, Washington University School of Medicine
Jonathan J SongWashington University School of Medicine
Jonathan J SongMcDonnell Genome Institute, Washington University School of Medicine
Malachi GriffithWashington University School of Medicine
Malachi GriffithMcDonnell Genome Institute, Washington University School of Medicine
Malachi GriffithWashington University School of Medicine
Malachi GriffithSiteman Cancer Center, Washington University School of Medicine
Obi L GriffithWashington University School of Medicine
Obi L GriffithMcDonnell Genome Institute, Washington University School of Medicine
Obi L GriffithWashington University School of Medicine
Obi L GriffithSiteman Cancer Center, Washington University School of Medicine
Alex H WagnerWashington University School of Medicine
Alex H WagnerMcDonnell Genome Institute, Washington University School of Medicine
Alex H WagnerThe Steve and Cindy Rasmussen Institute for Genomic Medicine, Nationwide Children's Hospital
Alex H WagnerThe Ohio State University College of Medicine
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Datasets

DGIdbDrug-gene interaction databaseLink
DGIdbDrug-gene interaction databaseLink
DGIdbDrug-gene interaction databaseLink
DGIdbDrug-gene interaction databaseLink
DGIdbDrug-gene interaction databaseLink
DGIdbDrug-gene interaction databaseLink
DGIdbDrug-gene interaction databaseLink
DGIdbDrug-gene interaction databaseLink
DGIdbDrug-gene interaction databaseLink
DGIdbDrug-gene interaction databaseLink
DGIdbDrug-gene interaction databaseLink
The Network Data ExchangeNDEx is an online commons where scientists can upload, share, and publicly distribute biological networks and pathway models. The NDEx Project maintains a web-accessible public server, a documentation website, provides seamless connectivity to Cytoscape as well as programmatic access using a variety of languages including Python and Java. NDEx users can easily create accounts or sign in using their Google credentials thanks to the supported open authentication (OAUTH2) method and mint DOIs for their networks to use in publications or include in other resources for long term access.Link
The Network Data ExchangeNDEx is an online commons where scientists can upload, share, and publicly distribute biological networks and pathway models. The NDEx Project maintains a web-accessible public server, a documentation website, provides seamless connectivity to Cytoscape as well as programmatic access using a variety of languages including Python and Java. NDEx users can easily create accounts or sign in using their Google credentials thanks to the supported open authentication (OAUTH2) method and mint DOIs for their networks to use in publications or include in other resources for long term access.Link
The Network Data ExchangeNDEx is an online commons where scientists can upload, share, and publicly distribute biological networks and pathway models. The NDEx Project maintains a web-accessible public server, a documentation website, provides seamless connectivity to Cytoscape as well as programmatic access using a variety of languages including Python and Java. NDEx users can easily create accounts or sign in using their Google credentials thanks to the supported open authentication (OAUTH2) method and mint DOIs for their networks to use in publications or include in other resources for long term access.Link
The Network Data ExchangeNDEx is an online commons where scientists can upload, share, and publicly distribute biological networks and pathway models. The NDEx Project maintains a web-accessible public server, a documentation website, provides seamless connectivity to Cytoscape as well as programmatic access using a variety of languages including Python and Java. NDEx users can easily create accounts or sign in using their Google credentials thanks to the supported open authentication (OAUTH2) method and mint DOIs for their networks to use in publications or include in other resources for long term access.Link