Database Commons
Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

PEpiD

General information

URL: http://wukong.tongji.edu.cn/pepid
Full name: Prostate Epigenetic Database
Description: PEpiD is a prostate epigenetic database in mammals. We constructed PEpiD to store the curated epigenetic data retrieved by literature mining, which previous studies indicated as involved in PC of human, mouse, and rat.
Year founded: 2013
Last update: 2013-03-01
Version: v1.0
Accessibility:
Accessible
Country/Region: China

Classification & Tag

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Contact information

University/Institution: Tongji University
Address: Department of Bioinformatics, Shanghai Key Laboratory of Signaling and Disease Research, The School of Life Sciences and Technology, Tongji University, Shanghai, China
City: Shanghai
Province/State: Shanghai
Country/Region: China
Contact name (PI/Team): Cizhong Jiang
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): czjiang@tongji.edu.cn

Publications

23696878
PEpiD: a prostate epigenetic database in mammals. [PMID: 23696878]
Shi J, Hu J, Zhou Q, Du Y, Jiang C.

Epigenetic mechanisms play key roles in initiation and progression of prostate cancer by changing gene expression. The Prostate Epigenetic Database (PEpiD: http://wukong.tongji.edu.cn/pepid) archives the three extensively characterized epigenetic mechanisms DNA methylation, histone modification, and microRNA implicated in prostate cancer of human, mouse, and rat. PEpiD uses a distinct color scheme to present the three types of epigenetic data and provides a user-friendly interface for flexible query. The retrieved information includes Refseq ID, gene symbol, gene alias, genomic loci of epigenetic changes, tissue source, experimental method, and supportive references. The change of histone modification (hyper or hypo) and the corresponding gene expression change (up or down) are also indicated. A graphic view of DNA methylation with exon-intron structure and predicted CpG islands is provided as well. Moreover, the prostate-related ENCODE tracks (DNA methylation, histone modifications, chromatin remodelers), and other key transcription factors with reported roles in prostate are displayed in the browser as well. The reversibility of epigenetic aberrations has made them potential markers for diagnosis and prognosis, and targets for treatment of cancers. This curated information will improve our understanding of epigenetic mechanisms of gene regulation in prostate cancer, and serve as an important resource for epigenetic research in prostate cancer.

PLoS One. 2013:8(5) | 8 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-20)

Ranking

All databases:
5802/6895 (15.867%)
Health and medicine:
1471/1738 (15.42%)
Modification:
311/337 (8.012%)
5802
Total Rank
8
Citations
0.667
z-index

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Record metadata

Created on: 2015-06-30
Curated by:
CiZhong Jiang [2018-11-28]
Lina Ma [2016-10-14]
Shixiang Sun [2016-03-25]
Shixiang Sun [2015-11-20]