@article{davis_grondin_lennon-hopkins_saraceni-richards_sciaky_king_wiegers_mattingly_2015, title={The Comparative Toxicogenomics Database's 10th year anniversary: update 2015}, volume={43}, ISSN={["1362-4962"]}, DOI={10.1093/nar/gku935}, abstractNote={Ten years ago, the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD; http://ctdbase.org/) was developed out of a need to formalize, harmonize and centralize the information on numerous genes and proteins responding to environmental toxic agents across diverse species. CTD's initial approach was to facilitate comparisons of nucleotide and protein sequences of toxicologically significant genes by curating these sequences and electronically annotating them with chemical terms from their associated references. Since then, however, CTD has vastly expanded its scope to robustly represent a triad of chemical–gene, chemical–disease and gene–disease interactions that are manually curated from the scientific literature by professional biocurators using controlled vocabularies, ontologies and structured notation. Today, CTD includes 24 million toxicogenomic connections relating chemicals/drugs, genes/proteins, diseases, taxa, phenotypes, Gene Ontology annotations, pathways and interaction modules. In this 10th year anniversary update, we outline the evolution of CTD, including our increased data content, new ‘Pathway View’ visualization tool, enhanced curation practices, pilot chemical–phenotype results and impending exposure data set. The prototype database originally described in our first report has transformed into a sophisticated resource used actively today to help scientists develop and test hypotheses about the etiologies of environmentally influenced diseases.}, number={D1}, journal={NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH}, author={Davis, Allan Peter and Grondin, Cynthia J. and Lennon-Hopkins, Kelley and Saraceni-Richards, Cynthia and Sciaky, Daniela and King, Benjamin L. and Wiegers, Thomas C. and Mattingly, Carolyn J.}, year={2015}, month={Jan}, pages={D914–D920} } @article{davis_wiegers_roberts_king_lay_lennon-hopkins_sciaky_johnson_keating_greene_et al._2013, title={A CTD-Pfizer collaboration: manual curation of 88 000 scientific articles text mined for drug-disease and drug-phenotype interactions}, ISSN={["1758-0463"]}, DOI={10.1093/database/bat080}, abstractNote={Improving the prediction of chemical toxicity is a goal common to both environmental health research and pharmaceutical drug development. To improve safety detection assays, it is critical to have a reference set of molecules with well-defined toxicity annotations for training and validation purposes. Here, we describe a collaboration between safety researchers at Pfizer and the research team at the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD) to text mine and manually review a collection of 88 629 articles relating over 1 200 pharmaceutical drugs to their potential involvement in cardiovascular, neurological, renal and hepatic toxicity. In 1 year, CTD biocurators curated 2 54 173 toxicogenomic interactions (1 52 173 chemical–disease, 58 572 chemical–gene, 5 345 gene–disease and 38 083 phenotype interactions). All chemical–gene–disease interactions are fully integrated with public CTD, and phenotype interactions can be downloaded. We describe Pfizer’s text-mining process to collate the articles, and CTD’s curation strategy, performance metrics, enhanced data content and new module to curate phenotype information. As well, we show how data integration can connect phenotypes to diseases. This curation can be leveraged for information about toxic endpoints important to drug safety and help develop testable hypotheses for drug–disease events. The availability of these detailed, contextualized, high-quality annotations curated from seven decades’ worth of the scientific literature should help facilitate new mechanistic screening assays for pharmaceutical compound survival. This unique partnership demonstrates the importance of resource sharing and collaboration between public and private entities and underscores the complementary needs of the environmental health science and pharmaceutical communities. Database URL: http://ctdbase.org/}, journal={DATABASE-THE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL DATABASES AND CURATION}, author={Davis, Allan Peter and Wiegers, Thomas C. and Roberts, Phoebe M. and King, Benjamin L. and Lay, Jean M. and Lennon-Hopkins, Kelley and Sciaky, Daniela and Johnson, Robin and Keating, Heather and Greene, Nigel and et al.}, year={2013}, month={Nov} }