Charles W. Sugnet
University of California, Santa Cruz
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Charles W. Sugnet.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2006
Robert M. Kuhn; Donna Karolchik; Ann S. Zweig; Heather Trumbower; Daryl J. Thomas; Archana Thakkapallayil; Charles W. Sugnet; Mario Stanke; Kayla E. Smith; Adam Siepel; Kate R. Rosenbloom; Brooke Rhead; Brian J. Raney; Andrew A. Pohl; Jakob Skou Pedersen; Fan Hsu; Angie S. Hinrichs; Rachel A. Harte; Mark Diekhans; Hiram Clawson; Gill Bejerano; Galt P. Barber; Robert Baertsch; David Haussler; William Kent
The UCSC Genome Browser Database (GBD, http://genome.ucsc.edu) is a publicly available collection of genome assembly sequence data and integrated annotations for a large number of organisms, including extensive comparative-genomic resources. In the past year, 13 new genome assemblies have been added, including two important primate species, orangutan and marmoset, bringing the total to 46 assemblies for 24 different vertebrates and 39 assemblies for 22 different invertebrate animals. The GBD datasets may be viewed graphically with the UCSC Genome Browser, which uses a coordinate-based display system allowing users to juxtapose a wide variety of data. These data include all mRNAs from GenBank mapped to all organisms, RefSeq alignments, gene predictions, regulatory elements, gene expression data, repeats, SNPs and other variation data, as well as pairwise and multiple-genome alignments. A variety of other bioinformatics tools are also provided, including BLAT, the Table Browser, the Gene Sorter, the Proteome Browser, VisiGene and Genome Graphs.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2004
Donna Karolchik; Angela S. Hinrichs; Terrence S. Furey; Krishna M. Roskin; Charles W. Sugnet; David Haussler; W. James Kent
The University of California Santa Cruz (UCSC) Table Browser (http://genome.ucsc.edu/cgi-bin/hgText) provides text-based access to a large collection of genome assemblies and annotation data stored in the Genome Browser Database. A flexible alternative to the graphical-based Genome Browser, this tool offers an enhanced level of query support that includes restrictions based on field values, free-form SQL queries and combined queries on multiple tables. Output can be filtered to restrict the fields and lines returned, and may be organized into one of several formats, including a simple tab- delimited file that can be loaded into a spreadsheet or database as well as advanced formats that may be uploaded into the Genome Browser as custom annotation tracks. The Table Browser Users Guide located on the UCSC website provides instructions and detailed examples for constructing queries and configuring output.
BMC Genomics | 2006
Paul Gardina; Tyson A. Clark; Brian Shimada; Michelle K Staples; Qing Yang; James Veitch; Anthony C. Schweitzer; Tarif Awad; Charles W. Sugnet; Suzanne Dee; Christopher J. Davies; Alan Williams; Yaron Turpaz
BackgroundAlternative splicing is a mechanism for increasing protein diversity by excluding or including exons during post-transcriptional processing. Alternatively spliced proteins are particularly relevant in oncology since they may contribute to the etiology of cancer, provide selective drug targets, or serve as a marker set for cancer diagnosis. While conventional identification of splice variants generally targets individual genes, we present here a new exon-centric array (GeneChip Human Exon 1.0 ST) that allows genome-wide identification of differential splice variation, and concurrently provides a flexible and inclusive analysis of gene expression.ResultsWe analyzed 20 paired tumor-normal colon cancer samples using a microarray designed to detect over one million putative exons that can be virtually assembled into potential gene-level transcripts according to various levels of prior supporting evidence. Analysis of high confidence (empirically supported) transcripts identified 160 differentially expressed genes, with 42 genes occupying a network impacting cell proliferation and another twenty nine genes with unknown functions. A more speculative analysis, including transcripts based solely on computational prediction, produced another 160 differentially expressed genes, three-fourths of which have no previous annotation. We also present a comparison of gene signal estimations from the Exon 1.0 ST and the U133 Plus 2.0 arrays.Novel splicing events were predicted by experimental algorithms that compare the relative contribution of each exon to the cognate transcript intensity in each tissue. The resulting candidate splice variants were validated with RT-PCR. We found nine genes that were differentially spliced between colon tumors and normal colon tissues, several of which have not been previously implicated in cancer. Top scoring candidates from our analysis were also found to substantially overlap with EST-based bioinformatic predictions of alternative splicing in cancer.ConclusionDifferential expression of high confidence transcripts correlated extremely well with known cancer genes and pathways, suggesting that the more speculative transcripts, largely based solely on computational prediction and mostly with no previous annotation, might be novel targets in colon cancer. Five of the identified splicing events affect mediators of cytoskeletal organization (ACTN1, VCL, CALD1, CTTN, TPM1), two affect extracellular matrix proteins (FN1, COL6A3) and another participates in integrin signaling (SLC3A2). Altogether they form a pattern of colon-cancer specific alterations that may particularly impact cell motility.
Bioinformatics | 2009
Andrew A. Pohl; Charles W. Sugnet; Tyson A. Clark; Kayla E. Smith; Pauline A. Fujita; Melissa S. Cline
Summary: Most genes in human, mouse and rat produce more than one transcript isoform. The Affymetrix Exon Array is a tool for studying the many processes that regulate RNA production, with separate probesets measuring RNA levels at known and putative exons. For insights on how exons levels vary between normal tissues, we constructed the Affy Exon Tissues track from tissue data published by Affymetrix. This track reports exon probeset intensities as log ratios relative to median values across the dataset and renders them as colored heat maps, to yield quick visual identification of exons with intensities that vary between normal tissues. Availability: Affy Exon Tissues track is freely available under the UCSC Genome Browser (http://genome.ucsc.edu/) for human (hg18), mouse (mm8 and mm9), and rat (rn4). Contact: [email protected] Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
Genome Research | 2002
W. James Kent; Charles W. Sugnet; Terrence S. Furey; Krishna M. Roskin; Tom H. Pringle; Alan M. Zahler; and David Haussler
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2000
Michael P. S. Brown; William Noble Grundy; David Yin-wei Lin; Nello Cristianini; Charles W. Sugnet; Terrence S. Furey; Manuel Ares; David Haussler
Nucleic Acids Research | 2003
Donna Karolchik; Robert Baertsch; Mark Diekhans; Terrence S. Furey; Angie S. Hinrichs; Yontao Lu; Krishna M. Roskin; M. Schwartz; Charles W. Sugnet; Daryl J. Thomas; Ryan Weber; David Haussler; William Kent
Science | 2002
Tyson A. Clark; Charles W. Sugnet; Manuel Ares
PLOS Computational Biology | 2005
Charles W. Sugnet; Karpagam Srinivasan; Tyson A. Clark; Georgeann O'brien; Melissa S. Cline; Hui Wang; Alan Williams; David Kulp; John E. Blume; David Haussler; Manuel Ares
pacific symposium on biocomputing | 2003
Charles W. Sugnet; William Kent; Manuel Ares; David Haussler