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Dive into the research topics where Daryl J. Thomas is active.

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Featured researches published by Daryl J. Thomas.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2006

The UCSC genome browser database: update 2007

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.


Nature Genetics | 2000

Large-scale discovery and genotyping of single-nucleotide polymorphisms in the mouse

Kerstin Lindblad-Toh; Ellen Winchester; Mark J. Daly; David G. Wang; Joel N. Hirschhorn; Jean-Philippe Laviolette; Kristin Ardlie; David Reich; Elizabeth Robinson; Pamela Sklar; Nila Shah; Daryl J. Thomas; Jian-Bing Fan; Thomas R. Gingeras; Janet A. Warrington; Nila Patil; Thomas J. Hudson; Eric S. Lander

Single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have been the focus of much attention in human genetics because they are extremely abundant and well-suited for automated large-scale genotyping. Human SNPs, however, are less informative than other types of genetic markers (such as simple-sequence length polymorphisms or microsatellites) and thus more loci are required for mapping traits. SNPs offer similar advantages for experimental genetic organisms such as the mouse, but they entail no loss of informativeness because bi-allelic markers are fully informative in analysing crosses between inbred strains. Here we report a large-scale analysis of SNPs in the mouse genome. We characterized the rate of nucleotide polymorphism in eight mouse strains and identified a collection of 2,848 SNPs located in 1,755 sequence-tagged sites (STSs) using high-density oligonucleotide arrays. Three-quarters of these SNPs have been mapped on the mouse genome, providing a first-generation SNP map of the mouse. We have also developed a multiplex genotyping procedure by which a genome scan can be performed with only six genotyping reactions per animal.


Nature Genetics | 2006

Conserved noncoding sequences are selectively constrained and not mutation cold spots

Jared A. Drake; Christine P. Bird; James Nemesh; Daryl J. Thomas; Christopher Newton-Cheh; Alexandre Reymond; Laurent Excoffier; Homa Attar; Emmanouil T. Dermitzakis; Joel N. Hirschhorn

Noncoding genetic variants are likely to influence human biology and disease, but recognizing functional noncoding variants is difficult. Approximately 3% of noncoding sequence is conserved among distantly related mammals, suggesting that these evolutionarily conserved noncoding regions (CNCs) are selectively constrained and contain functional variation. However, CNCs could also merely represent regions with lower local mutation rates. Here we address this issue and show that CNCs are selectively constrained in humans by analyzing HapMap genotype data. Specifically, new (derived) alleles of SNPs within CNCs are rarer than new alleles in nonconserved regions (P = 3 × 10−18), indicating that evolutionary pressure has suppressed CNC-derived allele frequencies. Intronic CNCs and CNCs near genes show greater allele frequency shifts, with magnitudes comparable to those for missense variants. Thus, conserved noncoding variants are more likely to be functional. Allele frequency distributions highlight selectively constrained genomic regions that should be intensively surveyed for functionally important variation.


Bioinformatics | 2005

LS-SNP: large-scale annotation of coding non-synonymous SNPs based on multiple information sources

Rachel Karchin; Mark Diekhans; Libusha Kelly; Daryl J. Thomas; Ursula Pieper; Narayanan Eswar; David Haussler; Andrej Sali

MOTIVATION The NCBI dbSNP database lists over 9 million single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the human genome, but currently contains limited annotation information. SNPs that result in amino acid residue changes (nsSNPs) are of critical importance in variation between individuals, including disease and drug sensitivity. RESULTS We have developed LS-SNP, a genomic scale software pipeline to annotate nsSNPs. LS-SNP comprehensively maps nsSNPs onto protein sequences, functional pathways and comparative protein structure models, and predicts positions where nsSNPs destabilize proteins, interfere with the formation of domain-domain interfaces, have an effect on protein-ligand binding or severely impact human health. It currently annotates 28,043 validated SNPs that produce amino acid residue substitutions in human proteins from the SwissProt/TrEMBL database. Annotations can be viewed via a web interface either in the context of a genomic region or by selecting sets of SNPs, genes, proteins or pathways. These results are useful for identifying candidate functional SNPs within a gene, haplotype or pathway and in probing molecular mechanisms responsible for functional impacts of nsSNPs. AVAILABILITY http://www.salilab.org/LS-SNP CONTACT: [email protected] SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION http://salilab.org/LS-SNP/supp-info.pdf.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

Variation resources at UC Santa Cruz

Daryl J. Thomas; Heather Trumbower; Andrew D. Kern; Brooke Rhead; Robert M. Kuhn; David Haussler; W. James Kent

The variation resources within the University of California Santa Cruz Genome Browser include polymorphism data drawn from public collections and analyses of these data, along with their display in the context of other genomic annotations. Primary data from dbSNP is included for many organisms, with added information including genomic alleles and orthologous alleles for closely related organisms. Display filtering and coloring is available by variant type, functional class or other annotations. Annotation of potential errors is highlighted and a genomic alignment of the variants flanking sequence is displayed. HapMap allele frequencies and linkage disequilibrium (LD) are available for each HapMap population, along with non-human primate alleles. The browsing and analysis tools, downloadable data files and links to documentation and other information can be found at .


PLOS ONE | 2010

Presymptomatic risk assessment for chronic non-communicable diseases.

Badri Padhukasahasram; Eran Halperin; Jennifer Wessel; Daryl J. Thomas; Elana Silver; Heather Trumbower; Michele Cargill; Dietrich A. Stephan

The prevalence of common chronic non-communicable diseases (CNCDs) far overshadows the prevalence of both monogenic and infectious diseases combined. All CNCDs, also called complex genetic diseases, have a heritable genetic component that can be used for pre-symptomatic risk assessment. Common single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that tag risk haplotypes across the genome currently account for a non-trivial portion of the germ-line genetic risk and we will likely continue to identify the remaining missing heritability in the form of rare variants, copy number variants and epigenetic modifications. Here, we describe a novel measure for calculating the lifetime risk of a disease, called the genetic composite index (GCI), and demonstrate its predictive value as a clinical classifier. The GCI only considers summary statistics of the effects of genetic variation and hence does not require the results of large-scale studies simultaneously assessing multiple risk factors. Combining GCI scores with environmental risk information provides an additional tool for clinical decision-making. The GCI can be populated with heritable risk information of any type, and thus represents a framework for CNCD pre-symptomatic risk assessment that can be populated as additional risk information is identified through next-generation technologies.


Nature Precedings | 2009

Curating Genetic Association Literature for Common Diseases

Elana Silver; Eran Halperin; Kord M. Kober; Badri Padhukasahasram; Nila Patil; Michelle Sommargren; Dietrich A. Stephan; Daryl J. Thomas; Heather Trumbower; Michele Cargill

Papers describing genetic associations with common diseases are currently being published at a rapid rate. These new papers add to an already large body of literature which includes candidate gene studies, genome wide association studies, review papers, and meta-analyses. Related papers describe the basic epidemiology of these common diseases, gene-environment interactions, gene-gene interactions, and pharmacogenomics (gene-drug interactions), all of which may affect disease predisposition and management.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2003

The UCSC Genome Browser Database

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 | 2001

Blocks of Limited Haplotype Diversity Revealed by High-Resolution Scanning of Human Chromosome 21

Nila Patil; Anthony J. Berno; David A. Hinds; Wade A. Barrett; Jigna Doshi; Coleen R. Hacker; Curtis R. Kautzer; Danny H. Lee; Claire Marjoribanks; David P. McDonough; Bich T. N. Nguyen; Michael C. Norris; John B. Sheehan; Naiping Shen; David L. Stern; Renee Stokowski; Daryl J. Thomas; Mark Trulson; Kanan R. Vyas; Kelly A. Frazer; Stephen P. A. Fodor; David R. Cox


Nature | 1994

NF-AT components define a family of transcription factors targeted in T-cell activation

Jeffrey P. Northrop; Steffan N. Ho; Lei Chen; Daryl J. Thomas; Luika A. Timmerman; Garry P. Nolan; Arie Admon; Gerald R. Crabtree

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David Haussler

University of California

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Robert M. Kuhn

University of California

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Brooke Rhead

University of California

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Dietrich A. Stephan

Translational Genomics Research Institute

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Eran Halperin

University of California

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