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Dive into the research topics where Alvis Brazma is active.

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Featured researches published by Alvis Brazma.


Nature Genetics | 2001

Minimum information about a microarray experiment (MIAME)-toward standards for microarray data.

Alvis Brazma; Pascal Hingamp; John Quackenbush; Gavin Sherlock; Paul T. Spellman; Stoeckert C; John Aach; Wilhelm Ansorge; Catherine A. Ball; Helen C. Causton; Terry Gaasterland; Patrick Glenisson; Irene F. Kim; John C. Matese; Helen Parkinson; Alan Robinson; Ugis Sarkans; Jason Stewart; Ronald C. Taylor; Jaak Vilo; Martin Vingron

Microarray analysis has become a widely used tool for the generation of gene expression data on a genomic scale. Although many significant results have been derived from microarray studies, one limitation has been the lack of standards for presenting and exchanging such data. Here we present a proposal, the Minimum Information About a Microarray Experiment (MIAME), that describes the minimum information required to ensure that microarray data can be easily interpreted and that results derived from its analysis can be independently verified. The ultimate goal of this work is to establish a standard for recording and reporting microarray-based gene expression data, which will in turn facilitate the establishment of databases and public repositories and enable the development of data analysis tools. With respect to MIAME, we concentrate on defining the content and structure of the necessary information rather than the technical format for capturing it.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2003

ArrayExpress—a public repository for microarray gene expression data at the EBI

Helen Parkinson; Ugis Sarkans; Mohammadreza Shojatalab; Niran Abeygunawardena; Sergio Contrino; Richard M. R. Coulson; Anna Farne; Gonzalo Garcia Lara; Ele Holloway; Misha Kapushesky; P. Lilja; Gaurab Mukherjee; Ahmet Oezcimen; Tim F. Rayner; Philippe Rocca-Serra; Anjan Sharma; Susanna-Assunta Sansone; Alvis Brazma

ArrayExpress is a public repository for microarray data that supports the MIAME (Minimum Informa-tion About a Microarray Experiment) requirements and stores well-annotated raw and normalized data. As of November 2004, ArrayExpress contains data from ∼12 000 hybridizations covering 35 species. Data can be submitted online or directly from local databases or LIMS in a standard format, and password-protected access to prepublication data is provided for reviewers and authors. The data can be retrieved by accession number or queried by vari-ous parameters such as species, author and array platform. A facility to query experiments by gene and sample properties is provided for a growing subset of curated data that is loaded in to the ArrayExpress data warehouse. Data can be visualized and analysed using Expression Profiler, the integrated data analysis tool. ArrayExpress is available at http://www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress.


Nature | 2013

Transcriptome and genome sequencing uncovers functional variation in humans.

Tuuli Lappalainen; Michael Sammeth; Marc R. Friedländer; Peter A. C. 't Hoen; Jean Monlong; Manuel A. Rivas; Mar Gonzàlez-Porta; Natalja Kurbatova; Thasso Griebel; Pedro G. Ferreira; Matthias Barann; Thomas Wieland; Liliana Greger; M. van Iterson; Jonas Carlsson Almlöf; Paolo Ribeca; Irina Pulyakhina; Daniela Esser; Thomas Giger; Andrew Tikhonov; Marc Sultan; G. Bertier; Daniel G. MacArthur; Monkol Lek; Esther Lizano; Henk P. J. Buermans; Ismael Padioleau; Thomas Schwarzmayr; Olof Karlberg; Halit Ongen

Genome sequencing projects are discovering millions of genetic variants in humans, and interpretation of their functional effects is essential for understanding the genetic basis of variation in human traits. Here we report sequencing and deep analysis of messenger RNA and microRNA from lymphoblastoid cell lines of 462 individuals from the 1000 Genomes Project—the first uniformly processed high-throughput RNA-sequencing data from multiple human populations with high-quality genome sequences. We discover extremely widespread genetic variation affecting the regulation of most genes, with transcript structure and expression level variation being equally common but genetically largely independent. Our characterization of causal regulatory variation sheds light on the cellular mechanisms of regulatory and loss-of-function variation, and allows us to infer putative causal variants for dozens of disease-associated loci. Altogether, this study provides a deep understanding of the cellular mechanisms of transcriptome variation and of the landscape of functional variants in the human genome.


Bioinformatics | 2005

BioMart and Bioconductor: a powerful link between biological databases and microarray data analysis

Steffen Durinck; Yves Moreau; Arek Kasprzyk; Sean Davis; Bart De Moor; Alvis Brazma; Wolfgang Huber

biomaRt is a new Bioconductor package that integrates BioMart data resources with data analysis software in Bioconductor. It can annotate a wide range of gene or gene product identifiers (e.g. Entrez-Gene and Affymetrix probe identifiers) with information such as gene symbol, chromosomal coordinates, Gene Ontology and OMIM annotation. Furthermore biomaRt enables retrieval of genomic sequences and single nucleotide polymorphism information, which can be used in data analysis. Fast and up-to-date data retrieval is possible as the package executes direct SQL queries to the BioMart databases (e.g. Ensembl). The biomaRt package provides a tight integration of large, public or locally installed BioMart databases with data analysis in Bioconductor creating a powerful environment for biological data mining.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

ArrayExpress—a public database of microarray experiments and gene expression profiles

Helen Parkinson; Misha Kapushesky; Mohammadreza Shojatalab; Niran Abeygunawardena; Richard M. R. Coulson; Anna Farne; Ele Holloway; Nikolay Kolesnykov; P. Lilja; Margus Lukk; Roby Mani; Tim F. Rayner; Anjan Sharma; E. William; Ugis Sarkans; Alvis Brazma

ArrayExpress is a public database for high throughput functional genomics data. ArrayExpress consists of two parts—the ArrayExpress Repository, which is a MIAME supportive public archive of microarray data, and the ArrayExpress Data Warehouse, which is a database of gene expression profiles selected from the repository and consistently re-annotated. Archived experiments can be queried by experiment attributes, such as keywords, species, array platform, authors, journals or accession numbers. Gene expression profiles can be queried by gene names and properties, such as Gene Ontology terms and gene expression profiles can be visualized. ArrayExpress is a rapidly growing database, currently it contains data from >50 000 hybridizations and >1 500 000 individual expression profiles. ArrayExpress supports community standards, including MIAME, MAGE-ML and more recently the proposal for a spreadsheet based data exchange format: MAGE-TAB. Availability: .


Nature Genetics | 2004

Periodic gene expression program of the fission yeast cell cycle

Gabriella Rustici; Juan Mata; Katja Kivinen; Pietro Liò; Christopher J. Penkett; Gavin Burns; Jacqueline Hayles; Alvis Brazma; Paul Nurse; Jürg Bähler

Cell-cycle control of transcription seems to be universal, but little is known about its global conservation and biological significance. We report on the genome-wide transcriptional program of the Schizosaccharomyces pombe cell cycle, identifying 407 periodically expressed genes of which 136 show high-amplitude changes. These genes cluster in four major waves of expression. The forkhead protein Sep1p regulates mitotic genes in the first cluster, including Ace2p, which activates transcription in the second cluster during the M-G1 transition and cytokinesis. Other genes in the second cluster, which are required for G1-S progression, are regulated by the MBF complex independently of Sep1p and Ace2p. The third cluster coincides with S phase and a fourth cluster contains genes weakly regulated during G2 phase. Despite conserved cell-cycle transcription factors, differences in regulatory circuits between fission and budding yeasts are evident, revealing evolutionary plasticity of transcriptional control. Periodic transcription of most genes is not conserved between the two yeasts, except for a core set of ∼40 genes that seem to be universally regulated during the eukaryotic cell cycle and may have key roles in cell-cycle progression.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2009

ArrayExpress update—from an archive of functional genomics experiments to the atlas of gene expression

Helen E. Parkinson; Misha Kapushesky; Nikolay Kolesnikov; Gabriella Rustici; Mohammadreza Shojatalab; Niran Abeygunawardena; Hugo Bérubé; Miroslaw Dylag; Ibrahim Emam; Anna Farne; Ele Holloway; Margus Lukk; James P. Malone; Roby Mani; Ekaterina Pilicheva; Tim F. Rayner; Faisal Ibne Rezwan; Anjan Sharma; Eleanor Williams; Xiangqun Zheng Bradley; Tomasz Adamusiak; Marco Brandizi; Tony Burdett; Richard M. R. Coulson; Maria Krestyaninova; Pavel Kurnosov; Eamonn Maguire; Sudeshna Guha Neogi; Philippe Rocca-Serra; Susanna-Assunta Sansone

ArrayExpress http://www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress consists of three components: the ArrayExpress Repository—a public archive of functional genomics experiments and supporting data, the ArrayExpress Warehouse—a database of gene expression profiles and other bio-measurements and the ArrayExpress Atlas—a new summary database and meta-analytical tool of ranked gene expression across multiple experiments and different biological conditions. The Repository contains data from over 6000 experiments comprising approximately 200 000 assays, and the database doubles in size every 15 months. The majority of the data are array based, but other data types are included, most recently—ultra high-throughput sequencing transcriptomics and epigenetic data. The Warehouse and Atlas allow users to query for differentially expressed genes by gene names and properties, experimental conditions and sample properties, or a combination of both. In this update, we describe the ArrayExpress developments over the last two years.


Nature Biotechnology | 2008

Promoting coherent minimum reporting guidelines for biological and biomedical investigations: the MIBBI project

Chris F. Taylor; Dawn Field; Susanna-Assunta Sansone; Jan Aerts; Rolf Apweiler; Michael Ashburner; Catherine A. Ball; Pierre Alain Binz; Molly Bogue; Tim Booth; Alvis Brazma; Ryan R. Brinkman; Adam Clark; Eric W. Deutsch; Oliver Fiehn; Jennifer Fostel; Peter Ghazal; Frank Gibson; Tanya Gray; Graeme Grimes; John M. Hancock; Nigel Hardy; Henning Hermjakob; Randall K. Julian; Matthew Kane; Carsten Kettner; Christopher R. Kinsinger; Eugene Kolker; Martin Kuiper; Nicolas Le Novère

The Minimum Information for Biological and Biomedical Investigations (MIBBI) project aims to foster the coordinated development of minimum-information checklists and provide a resource for those exploring the range of extant checklists.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2011

ArrayExpress update—an archive of microarray and high-throughput sequencing-based functional genomics experiments

Helen E. Parkinson; Ugis Sarkans; Nikolay Kolesnikov; Niran Abeygunawardena; Tony Burdett; Miroslaw Dylag; Ibrahim Emam; Anna Farne; Emma Hastings; Ele Holloway; Natalja Kurbatova; Margus Lukk; James Malone; Roby Mani; Ekaterina Pilicheva; Gabriella Rustici; Anjan Sharma; Eleanor Williams; Tomasz Adamusiak; Marco Brandizi; Nataliya Sklyar; Alvis Brazma

The ArrayExpress Archive (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress) is one of the three international public repositories of functional genomics data supporting publications. It includes data generated by sequencing or array-based technologies. Data are submitted by users and imported directly from the NCBI Gene Expression Omnibus. The ArrayExpress Archive is closely integrated with the Gene Expression Atlas and the sequence databases at the European Bioinformatics Institute. Advanced queries provided via ontology enabled interfaces include queries based on technology and sample attributes such as disease, cell types and anatomy.


Journal of Computational Biology | 1998

Approaches to the automatic discovery of patterns in biosequences.

Alvis Brazma; Inge Jonassen; Ingvar Eidhammer; David R. Gilbert

This paper surveys approaches to the discovery of patterns in biosequences and places these approaches within a formal framework that systematises the types of patterns and the discovery algorithms. Patterns with expressive power in the class of regular languages are considered, and a classification of pattern languages in this class is developed, covering the patterns that are the most frequently used in molecular bioinformatics. A formulation is given of the problem of the automatic discovery of such patterns from a set of sequences, and an analysis is presented of the ways in which an assessment can be made of the significance of the discovered patterns. It is shown that the problem is related to problems studied in the field of machine learning. The major part of this paper comprises a review of a number of existing methods developed to solve the problem and how these relate to each other, focusing on the algorithms underlying the approaches. A comparison is given of the algorithms, and examples are given of patterns that have been discovered using the different methods.

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Ugis Sarkans

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Helen Parkinson

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Misha Kapushesky

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Nuno A. Fonseca

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Gabriella Rustici

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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