10.6084/m9.figshare.4649866.v1 McClelland K.S. McClelland K.S. Yao H.H.-C. Yao H.H.-C. Supplementary Material for: Leveraging Online Resources to Prioritize Candidate Genes for Functional Analyses: Using the Fetal Testis as a Test Case Karger Publishers 2017 Candidate gene Databases Data mining Enrichment Expression atlas Gene prioritization GO terms Knowledgebases Ontology Ovary Sex determination Testis Transcriptomics 2017-02-14 11:49:08 Dataset https://karger.figshare.com/articles/dataset/Supplementary_Material_for_Leveraging_Online_Resources_to_Prioritize_Candidate_Genes_for_Functional_Analyses_Using_the_Fetal_Testis_as_a_Test_Case/4649866 <p>With each new microarray or RNA-seq experiment, massive quantities of transcriptomic information are generated with the purpose to produce a list of candidate genes for functional analyses. Yet an effective strategy remains elusive to prioritize the genes on these candidate lists. In this review, we outline a prioritizing strategy by taking a step back from the bench and leveraging the rich range of public databases. This in silico approach provides an economical, less biased, and more effective solution. We discuss the publicly available online resources that can be used to answer a range of questions about a gene. Is the gene of interest expressed in the system of interest (using expression databases)? Where else is this gene expressed (using added-value transcriptomic resources)? What pathways and processes is the gene involved in (using enriched gene pathway analysis and mouse knockout databases)? Is this gene correlated with human diseases (using human disease variant databases)? Using mouse fetal testis as an example, our strategies identified 298 genes annotated as expressed in the fetal testis. We cross-referenced these genes to existing microarray data and narrowed the list down to cell-type-specific candidates (35 for Sertoli cells, 11 for Leydig cells, and 25 for germ cells). Our strategies can be customized so that they allow researchers to effectively and confidently prioritize genes for functional analysis.</p>