CTD is a robust, publicly available database that aims to advance understanding about how environmental exposures affect human health. It provides manually curated information about chemical–gene/protein interactions, chemical–disease and gene–disease relationships. These data are integrated with functional and pathway data to aid in development of hypotheses about the mechanisms underlying environmentally influenced diseases.
We also have additional ongoing projects involving manual curation of exposome data and chemical–phenotype relationships to help identify pre–disease biomarkers resulting from environmental exposures.
This year, CTD turned 10! We’re grateful to our strong community support and encourage you to give us feedback so we can continue to evolve with your research needs.
This program is supported by funds from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS):
We’re also proud to be part of the NIEHS Environmental Health Science Center at NC State, the Center for Human Health and the Environment (P30ES025128).
CTD contains curated and inferred gene–disease associations.
Curated gene–disease associations are extracted from the published literature by CTD biocurators,
or are derived from the OMIM database using the mim2gene file from the
NCBI Gene database. Inferred associations (see
figure) are established via CTD–curated chemical–gene interactions (e.g., gene A is associated with
disease B because gene A has a curated interaction with chemical C, and chemical C has a curated association with
disease B). Curated and inferred associations are identified, and help users develop hypotheses
about mechanisms underlying environmental diseases.
CTD contains curated and inferred chemical–disease associations. Curated
chemical–disease associations are extracted from the published literature by CTD biocurators.
Inferred associations (see figure) are established via CTD–curated chemical–gene
interactions (e.g., chemical A is associated with disease B because chemical A has a curated interaction with gene
C, and gene C has a curated association with disease B). Curated and inferred associations are
identified, and help users develop hypotheses about mechanisms underlying environmental diseases.