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Featured researches published by Belinda Giardine.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

The UCSC Genome Browser database: extensions and updates 2011

Timothy R. Dreszer; Donna Karolchik; Ann S. Zweig; Angie S. Hinrichs; Brian J. Raney; Robert M. Kuhn; Laurence R. Meyer; Matthew C. Wong; Cricket A. Sloan; Kate R. Rosenbloom; Greg Roe; Brooke Rhead; Andy Pohl; Venkat S. Malladi; Chin H. Li; Katrina Learned; Vanessa M. Kirkup; Fan Hsu; Rachel A. Harte; Luvina Guruvadoo; Mary Goldman; Belinda Giardine; Pauline A. Fujita; Mark Diekhans; Melissa S. Cline; Hiram Clawson; Galt P. Barber; David Haussler; W. James Kent

The University of California Santa Cruz Genome Browser (http://genome.ucsc.edu) offers online public access to a growing database of genomic sequence and annotations for a wide variety of organisms. The Browser is an integrated tool set for visualizing, comparing, analyzing and sharing both publicly available and user-generated genomic data sets. In the past year, the local database has been updated with four new species assemblies, and we anticipate another four will be released by the end of 2011. Further, a large number of annotation tracks have been either added, updated by contributors, or remapped to the latest human reference genome. Among these are new phenotype and disease annotations, UCSC genes, and a major dbSNP update, which required new visualization methods. Growing beyond the local database, this year we have introduced ‘track data hubs’, which allow the Genome Browser to provide access to remotely located sets of annotations. This feature is designed to significantly extend the number and variety of annotation tracks that are publicly available for visualization and analysis from within our site. We have also introduced several usability features including track search and a context-sensitive menu of options available with a right-click anywhere on the Browsers image.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

The UCSC Genome Browser Database: 2008 update

Donna Karolchik; Robert M. Kuhn; Robert Baertsch; Galt P. Barber; Hiram Clawson; Mark Diekhans; Belinda Giardine; Rachel A. Harte; Angie S. Hinrichs; Fan Hsu; K. M. Kober; Webb Miller; Jakob Skou Pedersen; Andy Pohl; Brian J. Raney; Brooke Rhead; Kate R. Rosenbloom; Kayla E. Smith; Mario Stanke; Archana Thakkapallayil; Heather Trumbower; Ting Wang; Ann S. Zweig; David Haussler; William Kent

The University of California, Santa Cruz, Genome Browser Database (GBD) provides integrated sequence and annotation data for a large collection of vertebrate and model organism genomes. Seventeen new assemblies have been added to the database in the past year, for a total coverage of 19 vertebrate and 21 invertebrate species as of September 2007. For each assembly, the GBD contains a collection of annotation data aligned to the genomic sequence. Highlights of this year’s additions include a 28-species human-based vertebrate conservation annotation, an enhanced UCSC Genes set, and more human variation, MGC, and ENCODE data. The database is optimized for fast interactive performance with a set of web-based tools that may be used to view, manipulate, filter and download the annotation data. New toolset features include the Genome Graphs tool for displaying genome-wide data sets, session saving and sharing, better custom track management, expanded Genome Browser configuration options and a Genome Browser wiki site. The downloadable GBD data, the companion Genome Browser toolset and links to documentation and related information can be found at: http://genome.ucsc.edu/. INTRODUCTION Fundamental to expanding our knowledge of how the human body works in health and in disease is the capability to access and share data produced through experimentation and computational analysis. The University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC) Genome Browser Database (GBD) (http://genome.ucsc.edu) (1) provides a common repository for genomic annotation data—including comparative genomics, genes and gene predictions; mRNA and EST alignments; and expression, regulation, variation and assembly data—and robust, flexible tools for viewing, comparing, distributing and analyzing the information. Produced and maintained by the Genome Bioinformatics Group at the UCSC Center for Biomolecular Science and Engineering, the GBD focuses primarily on vertebrate and model organism genomes, with an emphasis on comparative genomics analysis. As of September 2007 the GBD contains data for 11 mammalian species including human, mouse, rat, chimpanzee, rhesus macaque, horse, cow, cat, dog, opossum and platypus; 8 other vertebrates: chicken, lizard (Anolis carolinensis), frog (Xenopus tropicalis), zebrafish, fugu, tetraodon, medaka and stickleback; and 21 invertebrates including 11 flies, honeybee, Anopheles mosquito, five worms, one yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) and two deuterostomes—purple sea urchin and sea squirt. For many of the organisms, more than one assembly is provided, and several older archived assemblies may be *To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel: +1 831 459 1544; Fax: +1 831 459 1809; Email: [email protected] University of California, Santa Cruz, Genome Browser Database (GBD) provides integrated sequence and annotation data for a large collection of vertebrate and model organism genomes. Seventeen new assemblies have been added to the database in the past year, for a total coverage of 19 vertebrate and 21 invertebrate species as of September 2007. For each assembly, the GBD contains a collection of annotation data aligned to the genomic sequence. Highlights of this years additions include a 28-species human-based vertebrate conservation annotation, an enhanced UCSC Genes set, and more human variation, MGC, and ENCODE data. The database is optimized for fast interactive performance with a set of web-based tools that may be used to view, manipulate, filter and download the annotation data. New toolset features include the Genome Graphs tool for displaying genome-wide data sets, session saving and sharing, better custom track management, expanded Genome Browser configuration options and a Genome Browser wiki site. The downloadable GBD data, the companion Genome Browser toolset and links to documentation and related information can be found at: http://genome.ucsc.edu/.


Nature | 2010

Complete Khoisan and Bantu genomes from southern Africa

Stephan C. Schuster; Webb Miller; Aakrosh Ratan; Lynn P. Tomsho; Belinda Giardine; Lindsay R. Kasson; Robert S. Harris; Desiree C. Petersen; Fangqing Zhao; Ji Qi; Can Alkan; Jeffrey M. Kidd; Yazhou Sun; Daniela I. Drautz; Pascal Bouffard; Donna M. Muzny; Jeffrey G. Reid; Lynne V. Nazareth; Qingyu Wang; Richard Burhans; Cathy Riemer; Nicola E. Wittekindt; Priya Moorjani; Elizabeth A. Tindall; Charles G. Danko; Wee Siang Teo; Anne M. Buboltz; Zhenhai Zhang; Qianyi Ma; Arno Oosthuysen

The genetic structure of the indigenous hunter-gatherer peoples of southern Africa, the oldest known lineage of modern human, is important for understanding human diversity. Studies based on mitochondrial and small sets of nuclear markers have shown that these hunter-gatherers, known as Khoisan, San, or Bushmen, are genetically divergent from other humans. However, until now, fully sequenced human genomes have been limited to recently diverged populations. Here we present the complete genome sequences of an indigenous hunter-gatherer from the Kalahari Desert and a Bantu from southern Africa, as well as protein-coding regions from an additional three hunter-gatherers from disparate regions of the Kalahari. We characterize the extent of whole-genome and exome diversity among the five men, reporting 1.3 million novel DNA differences genome-wide, including 13,146 novel amino acid variants. In terms of nucleotide substitutions, the Bushmen seem to be, on average, more different from each other than, for example, a European and an Asian. Observed genomic differences between the hunter-gatherers and others may help to pinpoint genetic adaptations to an agricultural lifestyle. Adding the described variants to current databases will facilitate inclusion of southern Africans in medical research efforts, particularly when family and medical histories can be correlated with genome-wide data.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

Integrative annotation of chromatin elements from ENCODE data

Michael M. Hoffman; Jason Ernst; Steven P. Wilder; Anshul Kundaje; Robert S. Harris; Max Libbrecht; Belinda Giardine; Paul M. Ellenbogen; Jeff A. Bilmes; Ewan Birney; Ross C. Hardison; Ian Dunham; Manolis Kellis; William Stafford Noble

The ENCODE Project has generated a wealth of experimental information mapping diverse chromatin properties in several human cell lines. Although each such data track is independently informative toward the annotation of regulatory elements, their interrelations contain much richer information for the systematic annotation of regulatory elements. To uncover these interrelations and to generate an interpretable summary of the massive datasets of the ENCODE Project, we apply unsupervised learning methodologies, converting dozens of chromatin datasets into discrete annotation maps of regulatory regions and other chromatin elements across the human genome. These methods rediscover and summarize diverse aspects of chromatin architecture, elucidate the interplay between chromatin activity and RNA transcription, and reveal that a large proportion of the genome lies in a quiescent state, even across multiple cell types. The resulting annotation of non-coding regulatory elements correlate strongly with mammalian evolutionary constraint, and provide an unbiased approach for evaluating metrics of evolutionary constraint in human. Lastly, we use the regulatory annotations to revisit previously uncharacterized disease-associated loci, resulting in focused, testable hypotheses through the lens of the chromatin landscape.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2004

Improvements in the HbVar database of human hemoglobin variants and thalassemia mutations for population and sequence variation studies

George P. Patrinos; Belinda Giardine; Cathy Riemer; Webb Miller; David H.K. Chui; Nicholas P. Anagnou; Henri Wajcman; Ross C. Hardison

HbVar (http://globin.cse.psu.edu/globin/hbvar/) is a relational database developed by a multi-center academic effort to provide up-to-date and high quality information on the genomic sequence changes leading to hemoglobin variants and all types of thalassemia and hemoglobinopathies. Extensive information is recorded for each variant and mutation, including sequence alterations, biochemical and hematological effects, associated pathology, ethnic occurrence and references. In addition to the regular updates to entries, we report two significant advances: (i) The frequencies for a large number of mutations causing beta-thalassemia in at-risk populations have been extracted from the published literature and made available for the user to query upon. (ii) HbVar has been linked with the GALA (Genome Alignment and Annotation database, available at http://globin.cse.psu.edu/gala/) so that users can combine information on hemoglobin variants and thalassemia mutations with a wide spectrum of genomic data. It also expands the capacity to view and analyze the data, using tools within GALA and the University of California at Santa Cruz (UCSC) Genome Browser.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

Updates of the HbVar database of human hemoglobin variants and thalassemia mutations

Belinda Giardine; Joseph A. Borg; Emmanouil Viennas; Cristiana Pavlidis; Kamran Moradkhani; Philippe Joly; Marina Bartsakoulia; Cathy Riemer; Webb Miller; Giannis Tzimas; Henri Wajcman; Ross C. Hardison; George P. Patrinos

HbVar (http://globin.bx.psu.edu/hbvar) is one of the oldest and most appreciated locus-specific databases launched in 2001 by a multi-center academic effort to provide timely information on the genomic alterations leading to hemoglobin variants and all types of thalassemia and hemoglobinopathies. Database records include extensive phenotypic descriptions, biochemical and hematological effects, associated pathology and ethnic occurrence, accompanied by mutation frequencies and references. Here, we report updates to >600 HbVar entries, inclusion of population-specific data for 28 populations and 27 ethnic groups for α-, and β-thalassemias and additional querying options in the HbVar query page. HbVar content was also inter-connected with two other established genetic databases, namely FINDbase (http://www.findbase.org) and Leiden Open-Access Variation database (http://www.lovd.nl), which allows comparative data querying and analysis. HbVar data content has contributed to the realization of two collaborative projects to identify genomic variants that lie on different globin paralogs. Most importantly, HbVar data content has contributed to demonstrate the microattribution concept in practice. These updates significantly enriched the database content and querying potential, enhanced the database profile and data quality and broadened the inter-relation of HbVar with other databases, which should increase the already high impact of this resource to the globin and genetic database community.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

ORegAnno: an open-access community-driven resource for regulatory annotation

Obi L. Griffith; Stephen B. Montgomery; Bridget Bernier; Bryan Chu; Katayoon Kasaian; Stein Aerts; Shaun Mahony; Monica C. Sleumer; Mikhail Bilenky; Maximilian Haeussler; Malachi Griffith; Steven M. Gallo; Belinda Giardine; Bart Hooghe; Peter Van Loo; Enrique Blanco; Amy Ticoll; Stuart Lithwick; Elodie Portales-Casamar; Ian J. Donaldson; Gordon Robertson; Claes Wadelius; Pieter De Bleser; Dominique Vlieghe; Marc S. Halfon; Wyeth W. Wasserman; Ross C. Hardison; Casey M. Bergman; Steven J.M. Jones

ORegAnno is an open-source, open-access database and literature curation system for community-based annotation of experimentally identified DNA regulatory regions, transcription factor binding sites and regulatory variants. The current release comprises 30 145 records curated from 922 publications and describing regulatory sequences for over 3853 genes and 465 transcription factors from 19 species. A new feature called the ‘publication queue’ allows users to input relevant papers from scientific literature as targets for annotation. The queue contains 4438 gene regulation papers entered by experts and another 54 351 identified by text-mining methods. Users can enter or ‘check out’ papers from the queue for manual curation using a series of user-friendly annotation pages. A typical record entry consists of species, sequence type, sequence, target gene, binding factor, experimental outcome and one or more lines of experimental evidence. An evidence ontology was developed to describe and categorize these experiments. Records are cross-referenced to Ensembl or Entrez gene identifiers, PubMed and dbSNP and can be visualized in the Ensembl or UCSC genome browsers. All data are freely available through search pages, XML data dumps or web services at: http://www.oreganno.org.


Nature | 2014

Principles of regulatory information conservation between mouse and human

Yong Cheng; Zhihai Ma; Bong-Hyun Kim; Weisheng Wu; Philip Cayting; Alan P. Boyle; Vasavi Sundaram; Xiaoyun Xing; Nergiz Dogan; Jingjing Li; Ghia Euskirchen; Shin Lin; Yiing Lin; Axel Visel; Trupti Kawli; Xinqiong Yang; Dorrelyn Patacsil; Cheryl A. Keller; Belinda Giardine; Anshul Kundaje; Ting Wang; Len A. Pennacchio; Zhiping Weng; Ross C. Hardison; Michael Snyder

To broaden our understanding of the evolution of gene regulation mechanisms, we generated occupancy profiles for 34 orthologous transcription factors (TFs) in human–mouse erythroid progenitor, lymphoblast and embryonic stem-cell lines. By combining the genome-wide transcription factor occupancy repertoires, associated epigenetic signals, and co-association patterns, here we deduce several evolutionary principles of gene regulatory features operating since the mouse and human lineages diverged. The genomic distribution profiles, primary binding motifs, chromatin states, and DNA methylation preferences are well conserved for TF-occupied sequences. However, the extent to which orthologous DNA segments are bound by orthologous TFs varies both among TFs and with genomic location: binding at promoters is more highly conserved than binding at distal elements. Notably, occupancy-conserved TF-occupied sequences tend to be pleiotropic; they function in several tissues and also co-associate with many TFs. Single nucleotide variants at sites with potential regulatory functions are enriched in occupancy-conserved TF-occupied sequences.


Nature Genetics | 2011

The value of data

Barend Mons; Herman H. H. B. M. van Haagen; Christine Chichester; P.A.C. ’t Hoen; Johan T. den Dunnen; Gert-Jan B. van Ommen; Erik M. van Mulligen; Bharat Singh; Rob W. W. Hooft; Marco Roos; Joel K. Hammond; Bruce Kiesel; Belinda Giardine; Jan Velterop; Paul T. Groth; Erik Schultes

Data citation and the derivation of semantic constructs directly from datasets have now both found their place in scientific communication. The social challenge facing us is to maintain the value of traditional narrative publications and their relationship to the datasets they report upon while at the same time developing appropriate metrics for citation of data and data constructs.


Nature Genetics | 2011

Systematic documentation and analysis of human genetic variation in hemoglobinopathies using the microattribution approach

Belinda Giardine; Joseph A. Borg; Douglas R. Higgs; Kenneth R. Peterson; Sjaak Philipsen; Donna Maglott; Belinda K. Singleton; David J. Anstee; A. Nazli Basak; Barnaby Clark; Flavia C Costa; Paula Faustino; Halyna Fedosyuk; Alex E. Felice; Alain Francina; Renzo Galanello; Monica V E Gallivan; Marianthi Georgitsi; Richard J. Gibbons; P. C. Giordano; Cornelis L. Harteveld; James D. Hoyer; Martin Jarvis; Philippe Joly; Emmanuel Kanavakis; Panagoula Kollia; Stephan Menzel; Webb Miller; Kamran Moradkhani; John Old

We developed a series of interrelated locus-specific databases to store all published and unpublished genetic variation related to hemoglobinopathies and thalassemia and implemented microattribution to encourage submission of unpublished observations of genetic variation to these public repositories. A total of 1,941 unique genetic variants in 37 genes, encoding globins and other erythroid proteins, are currently documented in these databases, with reciprocal attribution of microcitations to data contributors. Our project provides the first example of implementing microattribution to incentivise submission of all known genetic variation in a defined system. It has demonstrably increased the reporting of human variants, leading to a comprehensive online resource for systematically describing human genetic variation in the globin genes and other genes contributing to hemoglobinopathies and thalassemias. The principles established here will serve as a model for other systems and for the analysis of other common and/or complex human genetic diseases.

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Ross C. Hardison

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Webb Miller

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Cathy Riemer

Pennsylvania State University

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Cheryl A. Keller

Pennsylvania State University

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Gerd A. Blobel

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Richard Burhans

Pennsylvania State University

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Arjun Raj

University of Pennsylvania

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David Haussler

University of California

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