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Ensembl Genomes 2016: more genomes, more complexity
Author(s) -
Paul Kersey,
James E. Allen,
Irina M. Armean,
Sanjay Boddu,
Bruce J. Bolt,
Denise CarvalhoSilva,
Mikkel Christensen,
Paul A. Davis,
Lee J. Falin,
Christoph Grabmueller,
Jay C. Humphrey,
Arnaud Kerhornou,
Julia Khobova,
Naveen K. Aranganathan,
Nicholas Langridge,
Ernesto Lowy,
Mark D. McDowall,
Uma Maheswari,
Michael Nuhn,
Chuang Kee Ong,
Bert Overduin,
Michael Paulini,
Helder Pedro,
Emily Perry,
Giulietta Spudich,
Electra Tapanari,
Brandon Walts,
Gareth Williams,
Marcela K. TelloRuiz,
Joshua C. Stein,
Sharon Wei,
Doreen Ware,
Dan Bolser,
Kevin Howe,
Eugene Kulesha,
Daniel Lawson,
G. Maslen,
D. Staines
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkv1209
Subject(s) - ensembl , genome , biology , context (archaeology) , genomics , computational biology , resource (disambiguation) , comparative genomics , reference genome , synteny , evolutionary biology , genetics , gene , computer science , paleontology , computer network
Ensembl Genomes (http://www.ensemblgenomes.org) is an integrating resource for genome-scale data from non-vertebrate species, complementing the resources for vertebrate genomics developed in the context of the Ensembl project (http://www.ensembl.org). Together, the two resources provide a consistent set of programmatic and interactive interfaces to a rich range of data including reference sequence, gene models, transcriptional data, genetic variation and comparative analysis. This paper provides an update to the previous publications about the resource, with a focus on recent developments. These include the development of new analyses and views to represent polyploid genomes (of which bread wheat is the primary exemplar); and the continued up-scaling of the resource, which now includes over 23 000 bacterial genomes, 400 fungal genomes and 100 protist genomes, in addition to 55 genomes from invertebrate metazoa and 39 genomes from plants. This dramatic increase in the number of included genomes is one part of a broader effort to automate the integration of archival data (genome sequence, but also associated RNA sequence data and variant calls) within the context of reference genomes and make it available through the Ensembl user interfaces.

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