Ensembl 2008.by: P Flicek, B L L Aken, K Beal, B Ballester, M Caccamo, Y Chen, L Clarke, G Coates, F Cunningham, T Cutts, T Down, S C C Dyer, T Eyre, S Fitzgerald, J Fernandez-Banet, S Gräf, S Haider, M Hammond, R Holland, K L L Howe, K Howe, N Johnson, A Jenkinson, A Kähäri, D Keefe, F Kokocinski, E Kulesha, D Lawson, I Longden, K Megy, P Meidl, B Overduin, A Parker, B Pritchard, A Prlic, S Rice, D Rios, M Schuster, I Sealy, G Slater, D Smedley, G Spudich, S Trevanion, A J J Vilella, J Vogel, S White, M Wood, E Birney, T Cox, V Curwen, R Durbin, X M M Fernandez-Suarez, J Herrero, T J P J Hubbard, A Kasprzyk, G Proctor, J Smith, A Ureta-Vidal, S Searle
Nucleic Acids Res (13 November 2007)
|
Reviews
[Write a review of this article]
There are no reviews of this article
Find related articles from these CiteULike users
Find related articles with these CiteULike tags
AbstractThe Ensembl project (http://www.ensembl.org) is a comprehensive genome information system featuring an integrated set of genome annotation, databases and other information for chordate and selected model organism and disease vector genomes. As of release 47 (October 2007), Ensembl fully supports 35 species, with preliminary support for six additional species. New species in the past year include platypus and horse. Major additions and improvements to Ensembl since our previous report include extensive support for functional genomics data in the form of a specialized functional genomics database, genome-wide maps of protein-DNA interactions and the Ensembl regulatory build; support for customization of the Ensembl web interface through the addition of user accounts and user groups; and increased support for genome resequencing. We have also introduced new comparative genomics-based data mining options and report on the continued development of our software infrastructure.
BibTeX record
RIS record