Difference between revisions of "MSigDB v7.0 Release Notes"

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[http://www.broadinstitute.org/gsea/contact.jsp Contact]
 
[http://www.broadinstitute.org/gsea/contact.jsp Contact]
 
</span>
 
</span>
<p>This page describes the changes made to the gene set collections for Release 7.0 of the Molecular Signatures Database (MSigDB). This is a major release that includes substantial updates to gene set annotations, gene symbol mapping procedures, corrections to miscellaneous errors, an overhaul of several collections/sub-collections.</p>
 
  
<p><b>Note:</b> Due to substantial changes in MSigDB, it is recommended that users migrate to <tt>GSEA 4.0.0+</tt> when utilizing MSigDB 7.0+ resources.</p>
+
This page describes the changes made to the gene set collections for Release 7.0 of the Molecular Signatures Database (MSigDB). This is a major release that includes substantial updates to gene set annotations, gene symbol mapping procedures, overhaul of several collections/sub-collections, and corrections to miscellaneous errors.
 +
 
 +
<b>Note:</b> Due to substantial changes in MSigDB, it is recommended that users migrate to GSEA 4.0.0+ when utilizing MSigDB 7.0+ resources.<br>
 +
<b>Advisory</b>: It is strongly recommended that users of MSigDB7/GSEA4.0 '''always''' use the GSEA "Collapse dataset to gene symbols" feature with the provided Symbol Remapping chip file if your dataset was generated with a transcriptome other than Ensembl 97/GENCODE 31.
 +
 
 
<h2>Changes to MSigDB Gene Symbol Mapping Procedures</h2>
 
<h2>Changes to MSigDB Gene Symbol Mapping Procedures</h2>
<h3>Change to using ENSEMBL as the platform annotation authority</h3>
+
<h3>Now using Ensembl as the platform annotation authority</h3>
Beginning in MSigDB 7.0, identifiers for genes will be mapped to their HGNC approved Gene Symbol and NCBI Gene ID through annotations extracted from the then-current release of ENSEMBL's BioMart data service.
+
Beginning in MSigDB 7.0, identifiers for genes are mapped to their HGNC approved Gene Symbol and NCBI Gene ID through annotations extracted from Ensembl's BioMart data service, and will be updated at each MSigDB release with the latest available version of Ensembl. This change mitigates a previous issue where retired gene symbols and symbol aliases that did not reflect the current annotation of the human genome were retained in MSigDB as a result of outdated microarray and transcriptome annotations. This issue resulted in symbols being excluded from some gene sets and GSEA analyses due to the potential presence of multiple symbols for the same gene in different gene sets as a result of differing source annotations for those gene sets, and mismatches between the symbols present in the user supplied dataset and those included in MSigDB.
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
     <li>Gene annotations supplied in the MSigDB 7.0 release are derived from <span class="plainlinks">[jul2019.archive.ensembl.org/index.html ENSEMBL version 97</span> corresponding to Gencode release 31 and reflect the HGNC Gene Symbols as of the Gencode 31 freeze date of February 2019.</li>
+
     <li>Gene annotations supplied in the MSigDB 7.0 release are derived from '''<span class="plainlinks">[http://jul2019.archive.ensembl.org/index.html Ensembl version 97]</span>''' corresponding to '''GENCODE release 31''' and reflect the HGNC Gene Symbols as of the GENCODE 31 freeze date of February 2019.</li>
 +
</ul>
  
This change mitigates a previous issue where retired gene symbols and symbol aliases that did not reflect the current annotation of the human genome were retained in MSigDB as a result of outdated microarray and transcriptome annotations. This issue resulted in symbols being excluded from some gene sets and GSEA runs due to the potential presence of multiple symbols for the same gene in different gene sets as a result of differing source annotations for those gene sets, and mismatches between the symbols present in the user supplied dataset and those included in MSigDB.
+
<h3>Change to gene orthology mapping procedure for non-human gene sets</h3>
 
+
<ul>
     <li>A new Gene Symbol CHIP file for the GSEA "Collapse dataset" feature will be supplied in order to facilitate remapping data sets which use gene annotations prior to the ENSEMBL release 97/Gencode release 31 namespace used in MSigDB 7.0 in to this space for GSEA.</li>
+
     <li>Mouse and Rat genes were assigned to their corresponding Human orthologues using the gene orthologies provided in Ensembl BioMart for Ensembl version 97.</li>
     <li>New CHIP files have been provided to enable the use of data sets containing Mouse/Rat gene symbols directly through the use of the GSEA "Collapse dataset" feature.</li>  
+
     <li>As many Mouse and Rat genes correspond to many possible Human orthologues of various fidelity, a ranking procedure was utilized to match each respective non-human gene to its best orthologue match. Genes were ranked by their dS/dN score, their averaged reciprocal percent identicality, their Human Gene-order conservation score, and their Human Whole-genome alignment coverage. These metrics identify likely best orthologues using a combination of gene coding sequence conservation, gene non-coding sequence conservation, and genomic architecture conservation.</li>
 
+
</ul>
These annotations are derived from ENSEMBL 97's Mouse and Rat databases respectively, and support experiments from pipelines relying on Gencode annotations up to Gencode release M22 (Mouse). Mappings to orthologous Human genes were derived by the procedure described below.
 
  
 +
<h3>CHIP file updates</h3>
 +
<ul>
 +
    <li>A new Gene Symbol CHIP file for the GSEA "Collapse dataset" feature will be supplied in order to facilitate remapping data sets which use gene annotations prior to the Ensembl release 97/GENCODE release 31 namespace used in MSigDB 7.0 in to this space for GSEA.</li>
 +
    <li>New CHIP files have been provided to enable the use of data sets containing Mouse/Rat gene symbols directly through the use of the GSEA "Collapse dataset" feature. These annotations are derived from Ensembl 97's Mouse and Rat databases respectively, and support experiments from pipelines relying on GENCODE annotations up to GENCODE release M22 (Mouse). Mappings to orthologous Human genes were derived by the procedure described above.</li>
 
     <li>Previous symbols and aliases for each current gene were provided by their respective symbol authorities (e.g. HGNC for Human, MGI for Mouse, and RGD for Rat).</li>
 
     <li>Previous symbols and aliases for each current gene were provided by their respective symbol authorities (e.g. HGNC for Human, MGI for Mouse, and RGD for Rat).</li>
 
     <li>Previous NCBI IDs for all genes were extracted from the NCBI gene_history file available from the NCBI FTP server.</li>
 
     <li>Previous NCBI IDs for all genes were extracted from the NCBI gene_history file available from the NCBI FTP server.</li>
     <li>Several CHIP files annotating platforms which are not included in ENSEMBL's BioMart database have been depreciated.</li>
+
     <li>Several CHIP files annotating platforms which are not included in Ensembl's BioMart database have been depreciated.</li>
     <li>Annotations for all platforms represented in ENSEMBL's BioMart database have been updated to reflect the ENSEMBL version 97 annotations.</li>
+
     <li>Annotations for all platforms represented in Ensembl's BioMart database have been updated to reflect the Ensembl version 97 annotations.</li>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
<h3>Change to gene orthology mapping procedure for non-human gene sets</h3>
+
<h3>Changes to data set handling recommendations</h3>
 +
<ul>
 +
    <li>Due to substantial changes in MSigDB, it is recommended that users '''migrate to GSEA 4.0.0+ when utilizing MSigDB 7.0+''' resources.</li>
 +
    <li>It is strongly recommended that users of MSigDB7/GSEA4.0 '''always''' use the GSEA "Collapse dataset to gene symbols" feature with following the provided Symbol Remapping chip files '''even if your experiment is already in the gene symbols namespace''' as this will ensure that your gene symbols are matched to those used in MSigDB7.
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
    <li>Mouse and Rat genes were assigned to their corresponding Human orthologues using the gene orthologies provided in ENSEMBL BioMart for ENSEMBL version 97.</li>
+
  <li>Human_Symbol_with_Remapping_MSigDB.v7.0.chip</li>
    <li>As many Mouse and Rat genes correspond to many possible Human orthologues of various fidelity, a ranking procedure was utilized to match each respective non-human gene to its best orthologue match.</li>
+
  <li>Mouse_Gene_Symbol_Remapping_MSigDB.v7.0.chip</li>
 
+
  <li>Rat_Gene_Symbol_Remapping_MSigDB.v7.0.chip</li>
Genes were ranked by their dS/dN score, their averaged reciprocal percent identicality, their Human Gene-order conservation score, and their Human Whole-genome alignment coverage. These metrics identify likely best orthologues using a combination of gene coding sequence conservation, gene non-coding sequence conservation, and genomic architecture conservation.
+
</ul>
 +
This remapping is not necessary if your data set was generated using Ensembl 97 or GENCODE 31 transcriptomes. This is a change from our previous recommendation.</li>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
  
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As of MSigDB 7.0 the minimum size threshold for inclusion of a gene set in an MSigDB collection has been reduced to <b>5</b> unique gene symbols. This global filter threshold was previously set at 10 unique symbols. This change primarily affects gene sets in the C5:G0 and C2:CP:Reactome collections. This does not affect the default thresholds in the GSEA application.  
 
As of MSigDB 7.0 the minimum size threshold for inclusion of a gene set in an MSigDB collection has been reduced to <b>5</b> unique gene symbols. This global filter threshold was previously set at 10 unique symbols. This change primarily affects gene sets in the C5:G0 and C2:CP:Reactome collections. This does not affect the default thresholds in the GSEA application.  
  
<h2>Overhaul of Externally Sourced Collections</h2>
+
<h2>Updates to Gene Sets by Collection</h2>
  
<h3>Overhaul of positional gene sets collection (C1)</h3>
+
<h3>C1 (positional gene sets) - Major overhaul </h3>
C1 has been rebuilt to reflect the primary assembly of the current release of the Human Genome as present in ENSEMBL 97 and Gencode 31 (GRCh38.p12). Gene annotations for this collection are derived from the <tt>Chromosome</tt> and <tt>Karyotype band</tt> tracks from the ENSEMBL version 97 BioMart and reflect the gene architecture as represented on the primary assembly. This resulted in a small reduction in the number of gene sets (-27), as sets representing complete chromosome arms with few annotated genes were removed.  
+
C1 has been rebuilt to reflect the primary assembly of the current release of the Human Genome as present in Ensembl 97 and GENCODE 31 (GRCh38.p12). Gene annotations for this collection are derived from the ''Chromosome'' and ''Karyotype band'' tracks from the Ensembl BioMart (version 97) and reflect the gene architecture as represented on the primary assembly. This resulted in a small reduction in the number of gene sets (-27), as sets representing complete chromosome arms with few annotated genes were removed.  
  
<h3>Overhaul of the Reactome gene sets collection (C2:CP:Reactome)</h3>
+
<h3>C2:CP:Reactome - Major overhaul </h3>
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
     <li>Reactome gene sets have been updated to reflect the state of the Reactome pathway architecture as of Reactome v69 (+825 gene sets).
+
     <li>Reactome gene sets have been updated to reflect the state of the Reactome pathway architecture as of '''Reactome v69''' (+825 gene sets).
<p>In order to limit redundancy between gene sets within the Reactome sub-collection we applied a filtering procedure based on <tt>Jaccard's coefficients</tt> and distance from the hierarchy root previously described for limitation of redundancy within the C5:GO collections (see also, below).</p>
+
<li>In order to limit redundancy between gene sets within the Reactome sub-collection we applied a filtering procedure based on Jaccard coefficients and distance from the top level of the Reactome event hierarchy. This is similar to the procedure applied in the C5 (Gene Ontology) collection (see below). Briefly, we computed Jaccard coefficients for each pair of sets, and marked a pair as highly similar if its Jaccard coefficient was greater than 0.85. We then clustered highly similar sets into "chunks" using the <tt>hclust</tt> function from the R <tt>stats</tt> package and applied two rounds of filtering for every "chunk". First, we kept the largest set in the "chunk" and discarded the smaller sets. This left "chunks" of highly similar sets of identical sizes, which we further pruned by preferentially keeping the more general set (i.e., the set closest to one of the 28 pathways at the top level of the Reactome Event Hierarchy).
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
  
<h3>Other revisions to the C2 collection</h3>
+
<h3>C2:CP:BioCarta - Content revision </h3>
 
+
Pathways curated from BioCarta have been revised to reflect the final versions available of the Human BioCarta pathways as represented on the <span class="plainlinks">[https://cgap.nci.nih.gov/Pathways/BioCarta_Pathways NCI CGAP website].</span> This resulted in an overall increase of +72 gene sets. Gene set names were also revised as a result of this change and several gene sets were removed including:
<h4>Depreciated Gene Sets from C2:CGP</h4>
 
Previous releases of MSigDB contained gene sets derived from this resource that were founder sets for one of more gene sets in the MSigDB Hallmark collection. These deprecated C2 sets are included in MSigDB 7.0 as an ARCHIVED collection in order to preserve links to their pages from the hallmark gene set pages.
 
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
     <li>Gene sets derived from the Signal Transduction Knowledge Environment have been removed from MSigDB (-27 gene sets). The underlying data for this resource is no longer available in such a way that the collection could be reliably maintained. Previous releases of MSigDB contained gene sets derived from this resource that were founder sets for one of more gene sets in the MSigDB Hallmark collection. These deprecated C2 sets are included in MSigDB 7.0 as an ARCHIVED collection in order to preserve links to their pages from the hallmark gene set pages.</li>
+
     <li>''BIOCARTA_CHREBP2_PATHWAY'' was renamed to ''BIOCARTA_CHREBP_PATHWAY''.</li>
     <li>Gene sets with gene annotations derived from UniGene cluster identifiers have been retired and are no longer present in MSigDB 7.0 (-139 gene sets). The UniGene database has been retired by NCBI as of July 2019. This change affects only gene sets where UniGene cluster identifiers were present in the gene set's original ids annotation. The full list of affected gene sets is given in Appendix 1.</li>
+
     <li>''BIOCARTA_FEEDER_PATHWAY'' was removed.</li>
 +
    <li>''BIOCARTA_KREB_PATHWAY'' was removed.</li>
 +
    <li>''BIOCARTA_NEUROTRANSMITTERS_PATHWAY'' was removed.</li>
 +
    <li>''BIOCARTA_PROTEASOME_PATHWAY'' was removed.</li>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
 +
Additionally, missing genes from the ''BIOCARTA_STATHMIN_PATHWAY'' have been corrected.
  
<h4>Revisions to the C2:CP:BioCarta collection</h4>
+
<h3>C2:CP:PID - New sub-collection heading</h3>
Pathways curated from BioCarta have been revised to reflect the final versions available of the Human BioCarta pathways as represented on the <span class="plainlinks">[https://cgap.nci.nih.gov/Pathways/BioCarta_Pathways NCI CGAP website].</span> This resulted in an overall increase of +72 gene sets. Gene set names were also revised as a result of this change and several gene sets were removed including:
+
Gene sets from the Pathway Interaction Database have been given a top-level sub-collection heading (PID) within C2:CP.
 +
 
 +
<h3>C2:CGP - Miscellaneous corrections to curated gene sets</h3>
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
     <li><tt>BIOCARTA_CHREBP2_PATHWAY</tt> was renamed to <tt>BIOCARTA_CHREBP_PATHWAY</tt>.</li>
+
     <li>The names of the gene sets ''ERB2_UP.V1_UP/DN'' have been corrected to: ''ERBB2_UP.V1_UP/DN'' to accurately reflect the gene symbol.</li>
     <li><tt>BIOCARTA_FEEDER_PATHWAY</tt> was removed.</li>
+
    <li>The gene set ''LEI_MYB_TARGETS'' was annotated as originating from the HG-U133A microarray platform. The correct platform is: HG_U95Av2. This has been corrected.</li>
     <li><tt>BIOCARTA_KREB_PATHWAY</tt> was removed.</li>
+
     <li>The gene sets ''OISHI_CHOLANGIOMA_STEM_CELL_LIKE_UP/DN'' were annotated as originating from the HuGene-1_0_st microarray platform. The correct platform is: Affymetrix HG U133 Plus 2.0. This has been corrected.</li>
     <li><tt>BIOCARTA_NEUROTRANSMITTERS_PATHWAY</tt> was removed.</li>
+
    <li>16 of the 21 gene sets derived from PubMed ID: 18509334, Authors: Mikkelsen TS, et al. were incorrectly annotated as being derived from human data. The originating species was, in fact, Mus musculus. This has been corrected.</li>
     <li><tt>BIOCARTA_PROTEASOME_PATHWAY</tt> was removed.</li>
+
     <li>The gene sets ''CHEMELLO_SOLEUS_VS_EDL_MYOFIBERS_UP/DN'' had been assigned an incorrect PubMed ID. The correct PMID: 21364935 has been assigned.</li>
 +
     <li>The original data source annotation for the gene sets ''HAN_SATB1_TARGETS_UP/DN'' had been inadvertently switched. ''HAN_SATB1_TARGETS_UP'' now correctly refers to Supplementary Table 3-b, and ''HAN_SATB1_TARGETS_DN'' now correctly refers to Supplementary Table 3-c, of the original source publication.</li>
 +
     <li>Four gene sets were incorrectly attributed to PubMed ID: 17906691, Author: Mantovani G., et al.: ''MANTOVANI_NFKB_TARGETS_UP, MANTOVANI_NFKB_TARGETS_DN, MANTOVANI_VIRAL_GPCR_SIGNALING_DN, MANTOVANI_VIRAL_GPCR_SIGNALING_UP'' these gene sets have been renamed and reassigned to reflect the correct PMID and author. PMID: 17934524, Author: Martin D., et al. The gene set names have been edited to reflect this correction. See: ''MARTIN_NFKB_TARGETS_UP, MARTIN_NFKB_TARGETS_DN, MARTIN_VIRAL_GPCR_SIGNALING_DN, MARTIN_VIRAL_GPCR_SIGNALING_UP'' </li>
 +
    <li>Due to an error, the members were incorrect in 17 of the ''GARGALOVIC'' sets (PubMed ID: 16912112).  Likewise, +7 new gene sets that were missed earlier have been added.</li>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
Additionally, missing genes from the <tt>BIOCARTA_STATHMIN_PATHWAY</tt> have been corrected.
 
  
<h4>Miscellaneous corrections to curated gene sets (C2:CGP)</h4>
+
<h3>C2:CGP - Miscellaneous deprecated sets removed </h3>
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
     <li>The names of the gene sets <tt>ERB2_UP.V1_UP/DN</tt> have been corrected to: <tt>ERBB2_UP.V1_UP/DN</tt> to accurately reflect the gene symbol.</li>
+
     <li>Gene sets derived from the Signal Transduction Knowledge Environment have been removed from MSigDB (-27 gene sets). The underlying data for this resource is no longer available in such a way that the collection could be reliably maintained. </li>
     <li>The gene set <tt>LEI_MYB_TARGETS</tt> was annotated as originating from the <tt>HG-U133A</tt> microarray platform. The correct platform is: <tt>HG_U95Av2</tt>. This has been corrected.</li>
+
     <li>Gene sets with gene annotations derived from UniGene cluster identifiers have been retired and are no longer present in MSigDB 7.0 (-139 gene sets). The UniGene database has been retired by NCBI as of July 2019. This change affects only gene sets where UniGene cluster identifiers were present in the gene set's original ids annotation. The full list of affected gene sets is given in Appendix 1. </li>
    <li>The gene sets <tt>OISHI_CHOLANGIOMA_STEM_CELL_LIKE_UP/DN</tt> were annotated as originating from the <tt>HuGene-1_0_st</tt> microarray platform. The correct platform is: <tt>Affymetrix U133 Plus 2.0</tt>. This has been corrected.</li>
+
<li> Some of the above deprecated gene sets were founder sets for one of more gene sets in the MSigDB Hallmark collection. These deprecated C2 sets are included in MSigDB 7.0 in an ARCHIVED collection, in order to preserve links to their pages from the hallmark gene set pages.</li>
    <li>16 of the 21 gene sets derived from PubMed ID: 18509334, Authors: Mikkelsen TS, et al. were incorrectly annotated as being derived from human data. The originating species was, in fact, Mus musculus. This has been corrected.</li>
 
    <li>The gene sets <tt>CHEMELLO_SOLEUS_VS_EDL_MYOFIBERS_UP/DN</tt> had been assigned an incorrect PubMed ID. The correct PMID: 21364935 has been assigned.</li>
 
    <li>The original data source annotation for the gene sets <tt>HAN_SATB1_TARGETS_UP/DN</tt> had been inadvertently switched. <tt>HAN_SATB1_TARGETS_UP</tt> now correctly refers to Supplementary Table 3-b, and <tt>HAN_SATB1_TARGETS_DN</tt> now correctly refers to Supplementary Table 3-c, of the original source publication.</li>
 
    <li>Four gene sets were incorrectly attributed to PubMed ID: 17906691, Author: Mantovani G., et al.: <tt>MANTOVANI_NFKB_TARGETS_UP, MANTOVANI_NFKB_TARGETS_DN, MANTOVANI_VIRAL_GPCR_SIGNALING_DN, MANTOVANI_VIRAL_GPCR_SIGNALING_UP</tt> these gene sets have been renamed and reassigned to reflect the correct PMID and author. PMID: 17934524, Author: Martin D., et al. The gene set names have been edited to reflect this correction. See: <tt>MARTIN_NFKB_TARGETS_UP, MARTIN_NFKB_TARGETS_DN, MARTIN_VIRAL_GPCR_SIGNALING_DN, MARTIN_VIRAL_GPCR_SIGNALING_UP</tt> </li>
 
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
  
<h3>Overhaul of Gene Ontology collection (C5)</h3>
+
<h3>C5 (Gene Ontology collection) - Major overhaul </h3>
<p> Gene sets in this collection are derived from the controlled vocabulary of the Gene Ontology (GO) project: The Gene Ontology Consortium. Gene Ontology: tool for the unification of biology (<span class="plainlinks">[http://www.geneontology.org Nature Genet 2000]</span>). The gene sets are named by GO term and contain genes annotated by that term. We have replaced the entire collection with new gene sets using recent GO term annotations.</p>
+
<p> Gene sets in this collection are derived from the controlled vocabulary of the Gene Ontology (GO) project: The Gene Ontology Consortium. Gene Ontology: tool for the unification of biology (<span class="plainlinks">[http://www.geneontology.org Nature Genet 2000]</span>). The gene sets are named by GO term and contain genes annotated by that term. We have replaced the entire collection with new gene sets using recent GO term annotations (based on downloads from GO on '''February 21, 2019''').</p>
 
<p>This collection is divided into three sub-collections:</p>
 
<p>This collection is divided into three sub-collections:</p>
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
Line 93: Line 106:
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
 
<li><b>gene2go</b> (downloaded on February 21, 2019)</li>
 
<li><b>gene2go</b> (downloaded on February 21, 2019)</li>
<p>This file reports GO terms that have been associated with genes in NCBI Entrez Gene. It is generated by processing the gene_association file on the [http://www.geneontology.org/GO.current.annotations.shtml GO FTP site] and comparing the DB_Object_ID to annotation in NCBI Entrez Gene, as also reported in <tt>gene_info.gz</tt>. The file is available <span class="plainlinks">[ftp://ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/gene/DATA/ here]</span>. It is a tab delimited plain text file with one <tt>tax_id / gene_id / evidence_code</tt> per line.</p>
+
<p>This file reports GO terms that have been associated with genes in NCBI Entrez Gene. It is generated by processing the gene_association file on the [http://www.geneontology.org/GO.current.annotations.shtml GO FTP site] and comparing the DB_Object_ID to annotation in NCBI Entrez Gene, as also reported in ''gene_info.gz''. The file is available <span class="plainlinks">[ftp://ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/gene/DATA/ here]</span>. It is a tab delimited plain text file with one tax_id / gene_id / evidence_code per line.</p>
<li><b>go-basic.obo</b>(downloaded on February 21, 2019)</li>
+
<li><b>go-basic.obo</b> (downloaded on February 21, 2019)</li>
 
<p>This file contains the entire GO ontology in <span class="plainlinks">[http://owlcollab.github.io/oboformat/doc/GO.format.obo-1_2.html OBO v.1.2 format].</span></p>
 
<p>This file contains the entire GO ontology in <span class="plainlinks">[http://owlcollab.github.io/oboformat/doc/GO.format.obo-1_2.html OBO v.1.2 format].</span></p>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
<p>This procedure has been modified from that described previously for MSigDB v5.2. First, for each GO term we got the corresponding human genes from the gene2go file. Next, we have applied the path rule. Gene products are associated with the most specific GO terms possible. All parent terms up to the root automatically apply to the gene product. Thus, the parent GO term gene sets should include all genes associated with the children GO terms. Then we removed sets with fewer than <b>5</b> or more than 2,000 Gene IDs. Finally, we resolved redundancies as follows. We computed <tt>Jaccard's coefficients</tt> for each pair of sets, and marked a pair as highly similar if its <tt>Jaccard's coefficients</tt> was greater than 0.85. We then clustered highly similar sets into "chunks" using the <tt>hclust</tt> function from the R <tt>stats</tt> package according to their GO terms and applied two rounds of filtering for every "chunk". First, we kept the largest set in the "chunk" and discarded the smaller sets. This left "chunks" of highly similar sets of identical sizes, which we further pruned by preferably keeping the more general set (i.e., the set closest to the root of the GO ontology tree).</p>
+
<p>This procedure has been modified from that described previously for MSigDB v5.2. First, for each GO term we got the corresponding human genes from the gene2go file. Next, we have applied the path rule. Gene products are associated with the most specific GO terms possible. All parent terms up to the root automatically apply to the gene product. Thus, the parent GO term gene sets should include all genes associated with the children GO terms. Then we removed sets with fewer than <b>5</b> or more than 2,000 Gene IDs. Finally, we resolved redundancies as follows. We computed Jaccard coefficients for each pair of sets, and marked a pair as highly similar if its Jaccard coefficient was greater than 0.85. We then clustered highly similar sets into "chunks" using the <tt>hclust</tt> function from the R <tt>stats</tt> package according to their GO terms and applied two rounds of filtering for every "chunk". First, we kept the largest set in the "chunk" and discarded the smaller sets. This left "chunks" of highly similar sets of identical sizes, which we further pruned by preferentially keeping the more general set (i.e., the set closest to the root of the GO ontology tree).</p>
 
<p>A previous version of the C5 collection contained 864 gene sets that were founder sets for one or more gene set in the MSigDB Hallmark collection. These deprecated C5 sets are included in MSigDB 7.0 as an ARCHIVED collection in order to preserve links to their pages from the hallmark gene set pages.</p>
 
<p>A previous version of the C5 collection contained 864 gene sets that were founder sets for one or more gene set in the MSigDB Hallmark collection. These deprecated C5 sets are included in MSigDB 7.0 as an ARCHIVED collection in order to preserve links to their pages from the hallmark gene set pages.</p>
 +
 +
<h3>C6 (Oncogenic signatures) - Miscellaneous corrections </h3>
 +
<ul>
 +
<li>An error was identified with the gene sets ''PIGF_UP.V1.UP'' and ''PIGF_UP.V1.DN''. The original publication utilized an alias for the Placental Growth Factor gene which included a lowercase L (PlGF). This underwent a curation error when the sets were added to MSigDB which resulted in the conversion of the lowercase L to a capital I. This error in turn resulted in the incorrect annotation of the sets with the NCBI Gene ID for Phosphatidylinositol glycan anchor biosynthesis class F (Gene Symbol: PIDF, NCBI Gene ID: 5281).
 +
The gene sets have been corrected to ''PGF_UP.V1.UP'' and ''PGF_UP.V1.DN'' respectively, and correctly linked to NCBI Gene ID: 5228. </li>
 +
<li>Errors in the metadata for the gene set ''NFE2L2.V2'' were corrected. <br> This gene set had been incorrectly annotated as a signature of genes up-regulated in response to knockout of the nuclear factor NRF2. This gene set properly represents the signature of genes ''down''-regulated upon NFE2L2.V2 knockout and has been corrected to reflect this. <br> Additionally, this gene set had been miss-attributed to Malhotra et al., PubMed ID 20460467, the correct publication of Kim et al., PubMed ID: 27088724 has been assigned.</li>
 +
</ul>
 
   
 
   
 
<h2>Appendix 1: UniGene Derived Gene Sets Removed from C2:CGP</h2>
 
<h2>Appendix 1: UniGene Derived Gene Sets Removed from C2:CGP</h2>

Latest revision as of 15:47, 30 March 2020

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This page describes the changes made to the gene set collections for Release 7.0 of the Molecular Signatures Database (MSigDB). This is a major release that includes substantial updates to gene set annotations, gene symbol mapping procedures, overhaul of several collections/sub-collections, and corrections to miscellaneous errors.

Note: Due to substantial changes in MSigDB, it is recommended that users migrate to GSEA 4.0.0+ when utilizing MSigDB 7.0+ resources.
Advisory: It is strongly recommended that users of MSigDB7/GSEA4.0 always use the GSEA "Collapse dataset to gene symbols" feature with the provided Symbol Remapping chip file if your dataset was generated with a transcriptome other than Ensembl 97/GENCODE 31.

Changes to MSigDB Gene Symbol Mapping Procedures

Now using Ensembl as the platform annotation authority

Beginning in MSigDB 7.0, identifiers for genes are mapped to their HGNC approved Gene Symbol and NCBI Gene ID through annotations extracted from Ensembl's BioMart data service, and will be updated at each MSigDB release with the latest available version of Ensembl. This change mitigates a previous issue where retired gene symbols and symbol aliases that did not reflect the current annotation of the human genome were retained in MSigDB as a result of outdated microarray and transcriptome annotations. This issue resulted in symbols being excluded from some gene sets and GSEA analyses due to the potential presence of multiple symbols for the same gene in different gene sets as a result of differing source annotations for those gene sets, and mismatches between the symbols present in the user supplied dataset and those included in MSigDB.

  • Gene annotations supplied in the MSigDB 7.0 release are derived from Ensembl version 97 corresponding to GENCODE release 31 and reflect the HGNC Gene Symbols as of the GENCODE 31 freeze date of February 2019.

Change to gene orthology mapping procedure for non-human gene sets

  • Mouse and Rat genes were assigned to their corresponding Human orthologues using the gene orthologies provided in Ensembl BioMart for Ensembl version 97.
  • As many Mouse and Rat genes correspond to many possible Human orthologues of various fidelity, a ranking procedure was utilized to match each respective non-human gene to its best orthologue match. Genes were ranked by their dS/dN score, their averaged reciprocal percent identicality, their Human Gene-order conservation score, and their Human Whole-genome alignment coverage. These metrics identify likely best orthologues using a combination of gene coding sequence conservation, gene non-coding sequence conservation, and genomic architecture conservation.

CHIP file updates

  • A new Gene Symbol CHIP file for the GSEA "Collapse dataset" feature will be supplied in order to facilitate remapping data sets which use gene annotations prior to the Ensembl release 97/GENCODE release 31 namespace used in MSigDB 7.0 in to this space for GSEA.
  • New CHIP files have been provided to enable the use of data sets containing Mouse/Rat gene symbols directly through the use of the GSEA "Collapse dataset" feature. These annotations are derived from Ensembl 97's Mouse and Rat databases respectively, and support experiments from pipelines relying on GENCODE annotations up to GENCODE release M22 (Mouse). Mappings to orthologous Human genes were derived by the procedure described above.
  • Previous symbols and aliases for each current gene were provided by their respective symbol authorities (e.g. HGNC for Human, MGI for Mouse, and RGD for Rat).
  • Previous NCBI IDs for all genes were extracted from the NCBI gene_history file available from the NCBI FTP server.
  • Several CHIP files annotating platforms which are not included in Ensembl's BioMart database have been depreciated.
  • Annotations for all platforms represented in Ensembl's BioMart database have been updated to reflect the Ensembl version 97 annotations.

Changes to data set handling recommendations

  • Due to substantial changes in MSigDB, it is recommended that users migrate to GSEA 4.0.0+ when utilizing MSigDB 7.0+ resources.
  • It is strongly recommended that users of MSigDB7/GSEA4.0 always use the GSEA "Collapse dataset to gene symbols" feature with following the provided Symbol Remapping chip files even if your experiment is already in the gene symbols namespace as this will ensure that your gene symbols are matched to those used in MSigDB7.
    • Human_Symbol_with_Remapping_MSigDB.v7.0.chip
    • Mouse_Gene_Symbol_Remapping_MSigDB.v7.0.chip
    • Rat_Gene_Symbol_Remapping_MSigDB.v7.0.chip
    This remapping is not necessary if your data set was generated using Ensembl 97 or GENCODE 31 transcriptomes. This is a change from our previous recommendation.

Global Change to MSigDB Gene Set Inclusion Criteria

As of MSigDB 7.0 the minimum size threshold for inclusion of a gene set in an MSigDB collection has been reduced to 5 unique gene symbols. This global filter threshold was previously set at 10 unique symbols. This change primarily affects gene sets in the C5:G0 and C2:CP:Reactome collections. This does not affect the default thresholds in the GSEA application.

Updates to Gene Sets by Collection

C1 (positional gene sets) - Major overhaul

C1 has been rebuilt to reflect the primary assembly of the current release of the Human Genome as present in Ensembl 97 and GENCODE 31 (GRCh38.p12). Gene annotations for this collection are derived from the Chromosome and Karyotype band tracks from the Ensembl BioMart (version 97) and reflect the gene architecture as represented on the primary assembly. This resulted in a small reduction in the number of gene sets (-27), as sets representing complete chromosome arms with few annotated genes were removed.

C2:CP:Reactome - Major overhaul

  • Reactome gene sets have been updated to reflect the state of the Reactome pathway architecture as of Reactome v69 (+825 gene sets).
  • In order to limit redundancy between gene sets within the Reactome sub-collection we applied a filtering procedure based on Jaccard coefficients and distance from the top level of the Reactome event hierarchy. This is similar to the procedure applied in the C5 (Gene Ontology) collection (see below). Briefly, we computed Jaccard coefficients for each pair of sets, and marked a pair as highly similar if its Jaccard coefficient was greater than 0.85. We then clustered highly similar sets into "chunks" using the hclust function from the R stats package and applied two rounds of filtering for every "chunk". First, we kept the largest set in the "chunk" and discarded the smaller sets. This left "chunks" of highly similar sets of identical sizes, which we further pruned by preferentially keeping the more general set (i.e., the set closest to one of the 28 pathways at the top level of the Reactome Event Hierarchy).

C2:CP:BioCarta - Content revision

Pathways curated from BioCarta have been revised to reflect the final versions available of the Human BioCarta pathways as represented on the NCI CGAP website. This resulted in an overall increase of +72 gene sets. Gene set names were also revised as a result of this change and several gene sets were removed including:

  • BIOCARTA_CHREBP2_PATHWAY was renamed to BIOCARTA_CHREBP_PATHWAY.
  • BIOCARTA_FEEDER_PATHWAY was removed.
  • BIOCARTA_KREB_PATHWAY was removed.
  • BIOCARTA_NEUROTRANSMITTERS_PATHWAY was removed.
  • BIOCARTA_PROTEASOME_PATHWAY was removed.

Additionally, missing genes from the BIOCARTA_STATHMIN_PATHWAY have been corrected.

C2:CP:PID - New sub-collection heading

Gene sets from the Pathway Interaction Database have been given a top-level sub-collection heading (PID) within C2:CP.

C2:CGP - Miscellaneous corrections to curated gene sets

  • The names of the gene sets ERB2_UP.V1_UP/DN have been corrected to: ERBB2_UP.V1_UP/DN to accurately reflect the gene symbol.
  • The gene set LEI_MYB_TARGETS was annotated as originating from the HG-U133A microarray platform. The correct platform is: HG_U95Av2. This has been corrected.
  • The gene sets OISHI_CHOLANGIOMA_STEM_CELL_LIKE_UP/DN were annotated as originating from the HuGene-1_0_st microarray platform. The correct platform is: Affymetrix HG U133 Plus 2.0. This has been corrected.
  • 16 of the 21 gene sets derived from PubMed ID: 18509334, Authors: Mikkelsen TS, et al. were incorrectly annotated as being derived from human data. The originating species was, in fact, Mus musculus. This has been corrected.
  • The gene sets CHEMELLO_SOLEUS_VS_EDL_MYOFIBERS_UP/DN had been assigned an incorrect PubMed ID. The correct PMID: 21364935 has been assigned.
  • The original data source annotation for the gene sets HAN_SATB1_TARGETS_UP/DN had been inadvertently switched. HAN_SATB1_TARGETS_UP now correctly refers to Supplementary Table 3-b, and HAN_SATB1_TARGETS_DN now correctly refers to Supplementary Table 3-c, of the original source publication.
  • Four gene sets were incorrectly attributed to PubMed ID: 17906691, Author: Mantovani G., et al.: MANTOVANI_NFKB_TARGETS_UP, MANTOVANI_NFKB_TARGETS_DN, MANTOVANI_VIRAL_GPCR_SIGNALING_DN, MANTOVANI_VIRAL_GPCR_SIGNALING_UP these gene sets have been renamed and reassigned to reflect the correct PMID and author. PMID: 17934524, Author: Martin D., et al. The gene set names have been edited to reflect this correction. See: MARTIN_NFKB_TARGETS_UP, MARTIN_NFKB_TARGETS_DN, MARTIN_VIRAL_GPCR_SIGNALING_DN, MARTIN_VIRAL_GPCR_SIGNALING_UP
  • Due to an error, the members were incorrect in 17 of the GARGALOVIC sets (PubMed ID: 16912112). Likewise, +7 new gene sets that were missed earlier have been added.

C2:CGP - Miscellaneous deprecated sets removed

  • Gene sets derived from the Signal Transduction Knowledge Environment have been removed from MSigDB (-27 gene sets). The underlying data for this resource is no longer available in such a way that the collection could be reliably maintained.
  • Gene sets with gene annotations derived from UniGene cluster identifiers have been retired and are no longer present in MSigDB 7.0 (-139 gene sets). The UniGene database has been retired by NCBI as of July 2019. This change affects only gene sets where UniGene cluster identifiers were present in the gene set's original ids annotation. The full list of affected gene sets is given in Appendix 1.
  • Some of the above deprecated gene sets were founder sets for one of more gene sets in the MSigDB Hallmark collection. These deprecated C2 sets are included in MSigDB 7.0 in an ARCHIVED collection, in order to preserve links to their pages from the hallmark gene set pages.

C5 (Gene Ontology collection) - Major overhaul

Gene sets in this collection are derived from the controlled vocabulary of the Gene Ontology (GO) project: The Gene Ontology Consortium. Gene Ontology: tool for the unification of biology (Nature Genet 2000). The gene sets are named by GO term and contain genes annotated by that term. We have replaced the entire collection with new gene sets using recent GO term annotations (based on downloads from GO on February 21, 2019).

This collection is divided into three sub-collections:

  • CC: GO Cellular component (+421 gene sets). Gene sets derived from the Cellular Component Ontology.
  • MF: GO Molecular function (+744 gene sets). Gene sets derived from the Molecular Function Ontology.
  • BP: GO Biological process (+2914 gene sets). Gene sets derived from the Biological Process Ontology.

Outline of the procedure:

All sets are based on associations of GO terms to human genes. Genes annotated with the same GO term make the corresponding GO term gene set.

The input files are:

  • gene2go (downloaded on February 21, 2019)
  • This file reports GO terms that have been associated with genes in NCBI Entrez Gene. It is generated by processing the gene_association file on the GO FTP site and comparing the DB_Object_ID to annotation in NCBI Entrez Gene, as also reported in gene_info.gz. The file is available here. It is a tab delimited plain text file with one tax_id / gene_id / evidence_code per line.

  • go-basic.obo (downloaded on February 21, 2019)
  • This file contains the entire GO ontology in OBO v.1.2 format.

This procedure has been modified from that described previously for MSigDB v5.2. First, for each GO term we got the corresponding human genes from the gene2go file. Next, we have applied the path rule. Gene products are associated with the most specific GO terms possible. All parent terms up to the root automatically apply to the gene product. Thus, the parent GO term gene sets should include all genes associated with the children GO terms. Then we removed sets with fewer than 5 or more than 2,000 Gene IDs. Finally, we resolved redundancies as follows. We computed Jaccard coefficients for each pair of sets, and marked a pair as highly similar if its Jaccard coefficient was greater than 0.85. We then clustered highly similar sets into "chunks" using the hclust function from the R stats package according to their GO terms and applied two rounds of filtering for every "chunk". First, we kept the largest set in the "chunk" and discarded the smaller sets. This left "chunks" of highly similar sets of identical sizes, which we further pruned by preferentially keeping the more general set (i.e., the set closest to the root of the GO ontology tree).

A previous version of the C5 collection contained 864 gene sets that were founder sets for one or more gene set in the MSigDB Hallmark collection. These deprecated C5 sets are included in MSigDB 7.0 as an ARCHIVED collection in order to preserve links to their pages from the hallmark gene set pages.

C6 (Oncogenic signatures) - Miscellaneous corrections

  • An error was identified with the gene sets PIGF_UP.V1.UP and PIGF_UP.V1.DN. The original publication utilized an alias for the Placental Growth Factor gene which included a lowercase L (PlGF). This underwent a curation error when the sets were added to MSigDB which resulted in the conversion of the lowercase L to a capital I. This error in turn resulted in the incorrect annotation of the sets with the NCBI Gene ID for Phosphatidylinositol glycan anchor biosynthesis class F (Gene Symbol: PIDF, NCBI Gene ID: 5281). The gene sets have been corrected to PGF_UP.V1.UP and PGF_UP.V1.DN respectively, and correctly linked to NCBI Gene ID: 5228.
  • Errors in the metadata for the gene set NFE2L2.V2 were corrected.
    This gene set had been incorrectly annotated as a signature of genes up-regulated in response to knockout of the nuclear factor NRF2. This gene set properly represents the signature of genes down-regulated upon NFE2L2.V2 knockout and has been corrected to reflect this.
    Additionally, this gene set had been miss-attributed to Malhotra et al., PubMed ID 20460467, the correct publication of Kim et al., PubMed ID: 27088724 has been assigned.

Appendix 1: UniGene Derived Gene Sets Removed from C2:CGP

  • ACEVEDO_FGFR1_TARGETS_IN_PROSTATE_CANCER_MODEL_DN
  • ACEVEDO_FGFR1_TARGETS_IN_PROSTATE_CANCER_MODEL_UP
  • ALONSO_METASTASIS_DN
  • ALONSO_METASTASIS_UP
  • AMUNDSON_GAMMA_RADIATION_RESISTANCE
  • AMUNDSON_GAMMA_RADIATION_RESPONSE
  • AMUNDSON_GENOTOXIC_SIGNATURE
  • AMUNDSON_POOR_SURVIVAL_AFTER_GAMMA_RADIATION_2G
  • AMUNDSON_POOR_SURVIVAL_AFTER_GAMMA_RADIATION_8G
  • BACOLOD_RESISTANCE_TO_ALKYLATING_AGENTS_DN
  • BACOLOD_RESISTANCE_TO_ALKYLATING_AGENTS_UP
  • BUDHU_LIVER_CANCER_METASTASIS_DN
  • BUDHU_LIVER_CANCER_METASTASIS_UP
  • CHANG_CORE_SERUM_RESPONSE_DN
  • CHANG_CORE_SERUM_RESPONSE_UP
  • CHANG_CYCLING_GENES
  • CHAN_INTERFERON_PRODUCING_DENDRITIC_CELL
  • CSR_EARLY_UP
  • CSR_LATE_UP
  • DAIRKEE_TERT_TARGETS_DN
  • DAIRKEE_TERT_TARGETS_UP
  • DARWICHE_PAPILLOMA_RISK_HIGH_VS_LOW_DN
  • DARWICHE_PAPILLOMA_RISK_HIGH_VS_LOW_UP
  • FALVELLA_SMOKERS_WITH_LUNG_CANCER
  • GEORGANTAS_HSC_MARKERS
  • GRADE_COLON_CANCER_DN
  • GRADE_COLON_CANCER_UP
  • GRADE_METASTASIS_DN
  • HAMAI_APOPTOSIS_VIA_TRAIL_DN
  • HEDENFALK_BREAST_CANCER_BRCA1_VS_BRCA2
  • HEDENFALK_BREAST_CANCER_HEREDITARY_VS_SPORADIC
  • JIANG_HYPOXIA_CANCER
  • JIANG_HYPOXIA_NORMAL
  • JIANG_HYPOXIA_VIA_VHL
  • JIANG_VHL_TARGETS
  • JUBAN_TARGETS_OF_SPI1_AND_FLI1_DN
  • JUBAN_TARGETS_OF_SPI1_AND_FLI1_UP
  • KANG_GIST_WITH_PDGFRA_DN
  • KANG_GIST_WITH_PDGFRA_UP
  • KEEN_RESPONSE_TO_ROSIGLITAZONE_DN
  • KEEN_RESPONSE_TO_ROSIGLITAZONE_UP
  • KUROKAWA_LIVER_CANCER_CHEMOTHERAPY_DN
  • KUROKAWA_LIVER_CANCER_CHEMOTHERAPY_UP
  • LABBE_TARGETS_OF_TGFB1_AND_WNT3A_DN
  • LABBE_TARGETS_OF_TGFB1_AND_WNT3A_UP
  • LABBE_TGFB1_TARGETS_DN
  • LABBE_TGFB1_TARGETS_UP
  • LABBE_WNT3A_TARGETS_DN
  • LABBE_WNT3A_TARGETS_UP
  • LEE_LIVER_CANCER
  • MAHADEVAN_RESPONSE_TO_MP470_DN
  • MAHADEVAN_RESPONSE_TO_MP470_UP
  • MA_PITUITARY_FETAL_VS_ADULT_DN
  • MA_PITUITARY_FETAL_VS_ADULT_UP
  • MEINHOLD_OVARIAN_CANCER_LOW_GRADE_DN
  • MEINHOLD_OVARIAN_CANCER_LOW_GRADE_UP
  • MENSSEN_MYC_TARGETS
  • NAKAYAMA_FGF2_TARGETS
  • NELSON_RESPONSE_TO_ANDROGEN_DN
  • NELSON_RESPONSE_TO_ANDROGEN_UP
  • NIELSEN_GIST
  • NIELSEN_GIST_AND_SYNOVIAL_SARCOMA_DN
  • NIELSEN_GIST_AND_SYNOVIAL_SARCOMA_UP
  • NIELSEN_GIST_VS_SYNOVIAL_SARCOMA_DN
  • NIELSEN_GIST_VS_SYNOVIAL_SARCOMA_UP
  • NIELSEN_LEIOMYOSARCOMA_CNN1_DN
  • NIELSEN_LEIOMYOSARCOMA_CNN1_UP
  • NIELSEN_LEIOMYOSARCOMA_DN
  • NIELSEN_LEIOMYOSARCOMA_UP
  • NIELSEN_LIPOSARCOMA_DN NIELSEN_LIPOSARCOMA_UP
  • NIELSEN_MALIGNAT_FIBROUS_HISTIOCYTOMA_DN
  • NIELSEN_MALIGNAT_FIBROUS_HISTIOCYTOMA_UP
  • NIELSEN_SCHWANNOMA_DN
  • NIELSEN_SCHWANNOMA_UP
  • NIELSEN_SYNOVIAL_SARCOMA_DN
  • NIELSEN_SYNOVIAL_SARCOMA_UP NING_CHRONIC_OBSTRUCTIVE_PULMONARY_DISEASE_DN
  • NING_CHRONIC_OBSTRUCTIVE_PULMONARY_DISEASE_UP
  • OKAMOTO_LIVER_CANCER_MULTICENTRIC_OCCURRENCE_DN
  • OKAMOTO_LIVER_CANCER_MULTICENTRIC_OCCURRENCE_UP
  • OXFORD_RALA_AND_RALB_TARGETS_DN
  • OXFORD_RALA_AND_RALB_TARGETS_UP
  • OXFORD_RALA_OR_RALB_TARGETS_DN
  • OXFORD_RALA_OR_RALB_TARGETS_UP
  • OXFORD_RALA_TARGETS_DN
  • OXFORD_RALA_TARGETS_UP
  • OXFORD_RALB_TARGETS_DN
  • OXFORD_RALB_TARGETS_UP
  • PASTURAL_RIZ1_TARGETS_UP
  • PATTERSON_DOCETAXEL_RESISTANCE
  • PENG_GLUCOSE_DEPRIVATION_DN
  • PENG_GLUCOSE_DEPRIVATION_UP
  • PENG_GLUTAMINE_DEPRIVATION_DN
  • PENG_GLUTAMINE_DEPRIVATION_UP
  • PENG_LEUCINE_DEPRIVATION_DN
  • PENG_LEUCINE_DEPRIVATION_UP
  • PENG_RAPAMYCIN_RESPONSE_DN
  • PENG_RAPAMYCIN_RESPONSE_UP
  • ROME_INSULIN_TARGETS_IN_MUSCLE_DN
  • ROME_INSULIN_TARGETS_IN_MUSCLE_UP
  • SCHRAMM_INHBA_TARGETS_DN
  • SCHRAMM_INHBA_TARGETS_UP
  • SCHURINGA_STAT5A_TARGETS_DN
  • SCHURINGA_STAT5A_TARGETS_UP
  • SEIKE_LUNG_CANCER_POOR_SURVIVAL
  • SHEPARD_BMYB_MORPHOLINO_DN
  • SHEPARD_BMYB_MORPHOLINO_UP
  • SHEPARD_CRUSH_AND_BURN_MUTANT_UP
  • TRACEY_RESISTANCE_TO_IFNA2_DN
  • TRACEY_RESISTANCE_TO_IFNA2_UP
  • WANG_RESPONSE_TO_PACLITAXEL_VIA_MAPK8_DN
  • WANG_RESPONSE_TO_PACLITAXEL_VIA_MAPK8_UP
  • WATTEL_AUTONOMOUS_THYROID_ADENOMA_DN
  • WATTEL_AUTONOMOUS_THYROID_ADENOMA_UP
  • WONG_IFNA2_RESISTANCE_DN
  • WONG_IFNA2_RESISTANCE_UP
  • YANG_MUC2_TARGETS_COLON_3MO_DN
  • YANG_MUC2_TARGETS_DUODENUM_3MO_DN
  • YANG_MUC2_TARGETS_DUODENUM_6MO_DN
  • YANG_MUC2_TARGETS_DUODENUM_6MO_UP
  • YE_METASTATIC_LIVER_CANCER
  • YOSHIOKA_LIVER_CANCER_EARLY_RECURRENCE_DN
  • YOSHIOKA_LIVER_CANCER_EARLY_RECURRENCE_UP
  • ZEMBUTSU_SENSITIVITY_TO_CISPLATIN
  • ZEMBUTSU_SENSITIVITY_TO_CYCLOPHOSPHAMIDE
  • ZEMBUTSU_SENSITIVITY_TO_DOXORUBICIN
  • ZEMBUTSU_SENSITIVITY_TO_FLUOROURACIL
  • ZEMBUTSU_SENSITIVITY_TO_METHOTREXATE
  • ZEMBUTSU_SENSITIVITY_TO_MITOMYCIN
  • ZEMBUTSU_SENSITIVITY_TO_NIMUSTINE
  • ZEMBUTSU_SENSITIVITY_TO_VINBLASTINE
  • ZEMBUTSU_SENSITIVITY_TO_VINCRISTINE
  • ZHANG_TLX_TARGETS_36HR_DN
  • ZHANG_TLX_TARGETS_36HR_UP
  • ZHANG_TLX_TARGETS_60HR_DN
  • ZHANG_TLX_TARGETS_60HR_UP
  • ZHANG_TLX_TARGETS_DN
  • ZHANG_TLX_TARGETS_UP
  • ZUCCHI_METASTASIS_DN
  • ZUCCHI_METASTASIS_UP