Knowledge-Driven Mechanistic Enrichment of the Preeclampsia Ignorome
Tiffany J. Callahan, Adrianne L. Stefanski, Jin-Dong Kim, William A., Baumgartner Jr., Jordan M. Wyrwa, Lawrence E. Hunter

TL;DR
This study uses a biomedical knowledge graph to identify novel molecular mechanisms and uninvestigated genes associated with preeclampsia, enhancing understanding and potential therapeutic targets.
Contribution
The paper introduces a knowledge graph-based approach to uncover novel mechanistic insights and identify uninvestigated genes in preeclampsia research.
Findings
Identified 445 uninvestigated preeclampsia-associated DEGs.
Revealed 53 novel mechanistic associations relevant to preeclampsia.
Demonstrated the utility of knowledge graphs in biomedical discovery.
Abstract
Preeclampsia is a leading cause of maternal and fetal morbidity and mortality. Currently, the only definitive treatment of preeclampsia is delivery of the placenta, which is central to the pathogenesis of the disease. Transcriptional profiling of human placenta from pregnancies complicated by preeclampsia has been extensively performed to identify differentially expressed genes (DEGs). The decisions to investigate DEGs experimentally are biased by many factors, causing many DEGs to remain uninvestigated. A set of DEGs which are associated with a disease experimentally, but which have no known association to the disease in the literature are known as the ignorome. Preeclampsia has an extensive body of scientific literature, a large pool of DEG data, and only one definitive treatment. Tools facilitating knowledge-based analyses, which are capable of combining disparate data from many…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPregnancy and preeclampsia studies · RNA modifications and cancer · Birth, Development, and Health
