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Dive into the research topics where Bhanu Rajput is active.

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Featured researches published by Bhanu Rajput.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

RefSeq: an update on mammalian reference sequences

Kim D. Pruitt; Garth Brown; Susan M. Hiatt; Françoise Thibaud-Nissen; Alexander Astashyn; Olga Ermolaeva; Catherine M. Farrell; Jennifer Hart; Melissa J. Landrum; Kelly M. McGarvey; Michael R. Murphy; Nuala A. O’Leary; Shashikant Pujar; Bhanu Rajput; Sanjida H. Rangwala; Lillian D. Riddick; Andrei Shkeda; Hanzhen Sun; Pamela Tamez; Raymond E. Tully; Craig Wallin; David Webb; Janet Weber; Wendy Wu; Michael DiCuccio; Paul Kitts; Donna Maglott; Terence Murphy; James Ostell

The National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) Reference Sequence (RefSeq) database is a collection of annotated genomic, transcript and protein sequence records derived from data in public sequence archives and from computation, curation and collaboration (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/refseq/). We report here on growth of the mammalian and human subsets, changes to NCBI’s eukaryotic annotation pipeline and modifications affecting transcript and protein records. Recent changes to NCBI’s eukaryotic genome annotation pipeline provide higher throughput, and the addition of RNAseq data to the pipeline results in a significant expansion of the number of transcripts and novel exons annotated on mammalian RefSeq genomes. Recent annotation changes include reporting supporting evidence for transcript records, modification of exon feature annotation and the addition of a structured report of gene and sequence attributes of biological interest. We also describe a revised protein annotation policy for alternatively spliced transcripts with more divergent predicted proteins and we summarize the current status of the RefSeqGene project.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

Reference sequence (RefSeq) database at NCBI: current status, taxonomic expansion, and functional annotation

Nuala A. O'Leary; Mathew W. Wright; J. Rodney Brister; Stacy Ciufo; Diana Haddad; Richard McVeigh; Bhanu Rajput; Barbara Robbertse; Brian Smith-White; Danso Ako-adjei; Alexander Astashyn; Azat Badretdin; Yiming Bao; Olga Blinkova; Vyacheslav Brover; Vyacheslav Chetvernin; Jinna Choi; Eric Cox; Olga Ermolaeva; Catherine M. Farrell; Tamara Goldfarb; Tripti Gupta; Daniel H. Haft; Eneida Hatcher; Wratko Hlavina; Vinita Joardar; Vamsi K. Kodali; Wenjun Li; Donna Maglott; Patrick Masterson

The RefSeq project at the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) maintains and curates a publicly available database of annotated genomic, transcript, and protein sequence records (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/refseq/). The RefSeq project leverages the data submitted to the International Nucleotide Sequence Database Collaboration (INSDC) against a combination of computation, manual curation, and collaboration to produce a standard set of stable, non-redundant reference sequences. The RefSeq project augments these reference sequences with current knowledge including publications, functional features and informative nomenclature. The database currently represents sequences from more than 55 000 organisms (>4800 viruses, >40 000 prokaryotes and >10 000 eukaryotes; RefSeq release 71), ranging from a single record to complete genomes. This paper summarizes the current status of the viral, prokaryotic, and eukaryotic branches of the RefSeq project, reports on improvements to data access and details efforts to further expand the taxonomic representation of the collection. We also highlight diverse functional curation initiatives that support multiple uses of RefSeq data including taxonomic validation, genome annotation, comparative genomics, and clinical testing. We summarize our approach to utilizing available RNA-Seq and other data types in our manual curation process for vertebrate, plant, and other species, and describe a new direction for prokaryotic genomes and protein name management.


Genome Research | 2009

The consensus coding sequence (CCDS) project: Identifying a common protein-coding gene set for the human and mouse genomes

Kim D. Pruitt; Jennifer Harrow; Rachel A. Harte; Craig Wallin; Mark Diekhans; Donna Maglott; Steve Searle; Catherine M. Farrell; Jane Loveland; Barbara J. Ruef; Elizabeth Hart; Marie-Marthe Suner; Melissa J. Landrum; Bronwen Aken; Sarah Ayling; Robert Baertsch; Julio Fernandez-Banet; Joshua L. Cherry; Val Curwen; Michael DiCuccio; Manolis Kellis; Jennifer M. Lee; Michael F. Lin; Michael Schuster; Andrew Shkeda; Clara Amid; Garth Brown; Oksana Dukhanina; Adam Frankish; Jennifer Hart

Effective use of the human and mouse genomes requires reliable identification of genes and their products. Although multiple public resources provide annotation, different methods are used that can result in similar but not identical representation of genes, transcripts, and proteins. The collaborative consensus coding sequence (CCDS) project tracks identical protein annotations on the reference mouse and human genomes with a stable identifier (CCDS ID), and ensures that they are consistently represented on the NCBI, Ensembl, and UCSC Genome Browsers. Importantly, the project coordinates on manually reviewing inconsistent protein annotations between sites, as well as annotations for which new evidence suggests a revision is needed, to progressively converge on a complete protein-coding set for the human and mouse reference genomes, while maintaining a high standard of reliability and biological accuracy. To date, the project has identified 20,159 human and 17,707 mouse consensus coding regions from 17,052 human and 16,893 mouse genes. Three evaluation methods indicate that the entries in the CCDS set are highly likely to represent real proteins, more so than annotations from contributing groups not included in CCDS. The CCDS database thus centralizes the function of identifying well-supported, identically-annotated, protein-coding regions.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

Current status and new features of the Consensus Coding Sequence database

Catherine M. Farrell; Nuala A. O’Leary; Rachel A. Harte; Jane Loveland; Laurens Wilming; Craig Wallin; Mark Diekhans; Daniel Barrell; Stephen M. J. Searle; Bronwen Aken; Susan M. Hiatt; Adam Frankish; Marie-Marthe Suner; Bhanu Rajput; Charles A. Steward; Garth Brown; Ruth Bennett; Michael R. Murphy; Wendy Wu; Mike Kay; Jennifer Hart; Jeena Rajan; Janet Weber; Catherine Snow; Lillian D. Riddick; Toby Hunt; David Webb; Mark G. Thomas; Pamela Tamez; Sanjida H. Rangwala

The Consensus Coding Sequence (CCDS) project (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/CCDS/) is a collaborative effort to maintain a dataset of protein-coding regions that are identically annotated on the human and mouse reference genome assemblies by the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) and Ensembl genome annotation pipelines. Identical annotations that pass quality assurance tests are tracked with a stable identifier (CCDS ID). Members of the collaboration, who are from NCBI, the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and the University of California Santa Cruz, provide coordinated and continuous review of the dataset to ensure high-quality CCDS representations. We describe here the current status and recent growth in the CCDS dataset, as well as recent changes to the CCDS web and FTP sites. These changes include more explicit reporting about the NCBI and Ensembl annotation releases being compared, new search and display options, the addition of biologically descriptive information and our approach to representing genes for which support evidence is incomplete. We also present a summary of recent and future curation targets.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

RefSeq curation and annotation of antizyme and antizyme inhibitor genes in vertebrates

Bhanu Rajput; Terence Murphy; Kim D. Pruitt

Polyamines are ubiquitous cations that are involved in regulating fundamental cellular processes such as cell growth and proliferation; hence, their intracellular concentration is tightly regulated. Antizyme and antizyme inhibitor have a central role in maintaining cellular polyamine levels. Antizyme is unique in that it is expressed via a novel programmed ribosomal frameshifting mechanism. Conventional computational tools are unable to predict a programmed frameshift, resulting in misannotation of antizyme transcripts and proteins on transcript and genomic sequences. Correct annotation of a programmed frameshifting event requires manual evaluation. Our goal was to provide an accurately curated and annotated Reference Sequence (RefSeq) data set of antizyme transcript and protein records across a broad taxonomic scope that would serve as standards for accurate representation of these gene products. As antizyme and antizyme inhibitor proteins are functionally connected, we also curated antizyme inhibitor genes to more fully represent the elegant biology of polyamine regulation. Manual review of genes for three members of the antizyme family and two members of the antizyme inhibitor family in 91 vertebrate organisms resulted in a total of 461 curated RefSeq records.


Archive | 1990

Induction of the Urokinase-Type Plasminogen Activator Gene by Cytoskeleton-Disrupting Agents

Florence M. Botteri; Herman van der Putten; Bhanu Rajput; Kurt Ballmer-Hofer; Yoshikuni Nagamine

The interaction of a cell with specific components of the extracellular matrix can result in alterations of cell-shape and morphology.1’2 To a large extent such structural changes are the consequence of modifications of the cytoskeletal network. Dynamic cytoskeletal changes take place in migrating cells as well as in transformed cells.3 Most likely, migration of normal or metastatic tumor cells requires the expression of specific endogenous genes whose products assist in reshaping the intracellular cytoskeleton and the extracellular matrix. How and whether changes in cell morphology and cytoskeletal components may cause alterations in the expression of certain genes has not yet been investigated extensively.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2018

Consensus coding sequence (CCDS) database: a standardized set of human and mouse protein-coding regions supported by expert curation.

Shashikant Pujar; Nuala A. O’Leary; Catherine M. Farrell; Jane Loveland; Jonathan M Mudge; Craig Wallin; Carlos García Girón; Mark Diekhans; If Barnes; Ruth Bennett; Andrew E Berry; Eric Cox; Claire Davidson; Tamara Goldfarb; Jose Gonzalez; Toby Hunt; John D. Jackson; Vinita Joardar; Mike P Kay; Vamsi K. Kodali; Fergal J Martin; Monica McAndrews; Kelly M. McGarvey; Mike Murphy; Bhanu Rajput; Sanjida H. Rangwala; Lillian D. Riddick; Ruth L Seal; Marie-Marthe Suner; David Webb

Abstract The Consensus Coding Sequence (CCDS) project provides a dataset of protein-coding regions that are identically annotated on the human and mouse reference genome assembly in genome annotations produced independently by NCBI and the Ensembl group at EMBL-EBI. This dataset is the product of an international collaboration that includes NCBI, Ensembl, HUGO Gene Nomenclature Committee, Mouse Genome Informatics and University of California, Santa Cruz. Identically annotated coding regions, which are generated using an automated pipeline and pass multiple quality assurance checks, are assigned a stable and tracked identifier (CCDS ID). Additionally, coordinated manual review by expert curators from the CCDS collaboration helps in maintaining the integrity and high quality of the dataset. The CCDS data are available through an interactive web page (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/CCDS/CcdsBrowse.cgi) and an FTP site (ftp://ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pub/CCDS/). In this paper, we outline the ongoing work, growth and stability of the CCDS dataset and provide updates on new collaboration members and new features added to the CCDS user interface. We also present expert curation scenarios, with specific examples highlighting the importance of an accurate reference genome assembly and the crucial role played by input from the research community.


Nucleic Acids Research | 1988

Multiple nuclear factors interact with promoter sequences of the urokinase-type plasminogen activator gene

Dietmar von der Ahe; David Pearson; Jun-ichi Nakagawa; Bhanu Rajput; Yoshikuni Nagamine


Nucleic Acids Research | 1982

Transcription of cloned transfer RNA genes from Drosophila melanogaster in a homologous cell-free extract

Bhanu Rajput; Loverne Duncan; Dianne DeMille; Robert C. Miller; George B. Spiegelman


Mammalian Genome | 2015

Mouse genome annotation by the RefSeq project

Kelly M. McGarvey; Tamara Goldfarb; Eric Cox; Catherine M. Farrell; Tripti Gupta; Vinita Joardar; Vamsi K. Kodali; Michael R. Murphy; Nuala A. O’Leary; Shashikant Pujar; Bhanu Rajput; Sanjida H. Rangwala; Lillian D. Riddick; David Webb; Mathew W. Wright; Terence Murphy; Kim D. Pruitt

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Catherine M. Farrell

National Institutes of Health

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David Webb

National Institutes of Health

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Kim D. Pruitt

National Institutes of Health

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Lillian D. Riddick

National Institutes of Health

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Craig Wallin

University of California

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Donna Maglott

National Institutes of Health

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Garth Brown

National Institutes of Health

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Jennifer Hart

National Institutes of Health

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