The Candidate Cancer Gene Database (CCGD) was developed to make accessible a collated set of results from transposon-based forward cancer genetic screens in mice. The value in doing this is to give investigators the ability to quickly filter through the results of many such screens in an effort to determine the candidacy of a gene for its role in cancer.


Background

This work is a product of the Starr Lab at the University of Minnesota. The Starr Lab is affiliated with the Center for Genome Engineering, the Masonic Cancer Center, the Department of OB/GYN, and the Department of Genetics, Cell Biology, and Development.

Contributions

The idea for creating this database originated from Tim Starr, Vincent Keng, and David Largaespada at UMN. Erik Nyre and Ken Abbott developed the original database, with help from Juan Abrahante. A complete website and backend overhaul was conducted by Christopher Tastad in 2019.

The database is hosted by the Office of Information Technology at UMN. The database obtains regular updates from NCBI Gene and NCBI HomoloGene. Additionally, updates are made with data pulled from Sanger CGC and Sanger COSMIC. Administrators add information from NCBI PubMed. When necessary, administrators convert genome addresses to the current mouse genome build using UCSC LiftOver.


Updates

The most recent table build was completed on:


Site Address

With our overhaul in 2019 we also moved to a new hosting arrangement. OIT policies require that we have a redirect in place for the original site address. As a result, there are several site addresses that can be used to navigate here. Do not be alarmed if the address in the browser bar changes as navigation takes place.

Possible URL addresses:

All 3 of these will take you to the CCGD homepage.


Citation

Please use the following when citing the CCGD:

  • Click here for the citation in bibtex format.

Abbott, Kenneth L, Erik T Nyre, Juan Abrahante, Yen-Yi Ho, Rachel Isaksson Vogel, and Timothy K Starr. 2015. “The Candidate Cancer Gene Database: a database of cancer driver genes from forward genetic screens in mice.” Nucleic Acids Research 43 (Database issue): D844–8. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gku770.



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