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Dive into the research topics where Madeline A. Crosby is active.

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Featured researches published by Madeline A. Crosby.


Nature | 2007

Discovery of functional elements in 12 Drosophila genomes using evolutionary signatures

Alexander Stark; Michael F. Lin; Pouya Kheradpour; Jakob Skou Pedersen; Leopold Parts; Joseph W. Carlson; Madeline A. Crosby; Matthew D. Rasmussen; Sushmita Roy; Ameya N. Deoras; J. Graham Ruby; Julius Brennecke; Harvard FlyBase curators; Berkeley Drosophila Genome; Emily Hodges; Angie S. Hinrichs; Anat Caspi; Benedict Paten; Seung-Won Park; Mira V. Han; Morgan L. Maeder; Benjamin J. Polansky; Bryanne E. Robson; Stein Aerts; Jacques van Helden; Bassem A. Hassan; Donald G. Gilbert; Deborah A. Eastman; Michael D. Rice; Michael Weir

Sequencing of multiple related species followed by comparative genomics analysis constitutes a powerful approach for the systematic understanding of any genome. Here, we use the genomes of 12 Drosophila species for the de novo discovery of functional elements in the fly. Each type of functional element shows characteristic patterns of change, or ‘evolutionary signatures’, dictated by its precise selective constraints. Such signatures enable recognition of new protein-coding genes and exons, spurious and incorrect gene annotations, and numerous unusual gene structures, including abundant stop-codon readthrough. Similarly, we predict non-protein-coding RNA genes and structures, and new microRNA (miRNA) genes. We provide evidence of miRNA processing and functionality from both hairpin arms and both DNA strands. We identify several classes of pre- and post-transcriptional regulatory motifs, and predict individual motif instances with high confidence. We also study how discovery power scales with the divergence and number of species compared, and we provide general guidelines for comparative studies.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2004

FlyBase: genes and gene models.

Rachel Drysdale; Madeline A. Crosby

FlyBase (http://flybase.org) is the primary repository of genetic and molecular data of the insect family Drosophilidae. For the most extensively studied species, Drosophila melanogaster, a wide range of data are presented in integrated formats. Data types include mutant phenotypes, molecular characterization of mutant alleles and aberrations, cytological maps, wild-type expression patterns, anatomical images, transgenic constructs and insertions, sequence-level gene models and molecular classification of gene product functions. There is a growing body of data for other Drosophila species; this is expected to increase dramatically over the next year, with the completion of draft-quality genomic sequences of an additional 11 Drosphila species.


Genome Biology | 2002

Apollo: a sequence annotation editor

Suzanna E. Lewis; Smj Searle; Nomi L. Harris; M Gibson; Vivek Iyer; John Richter; C Wiel; Leyla Bayraktaroglu; Ewan Birney; Madeline A. Crosby; Joshua S Kaminker; Beverley B. Matthews; Se Prochnik; Christopher D. Smith; Jl Tupy; Gerald M. Rubin; S Misra; Christopher J. Mungall; Michele Clamp

The well-established inaccuracy of purely computational methods for annotating genome sequences necessitates an interactive tool to allow biological experts to refine these approximations by viewing and independently evaluating the data supporting each annotation. Apollo was developed to meet this need, enabling curators to inspect genome annotations closely and edit them. FlyBase biologists successfully used Apollo to annotate the Drosophila melanogaster genome and it is increasingly being used as a starting point for the development of customized annotation editing tools for other genome projects.


Genome Biology | 2002

Annotation of the Drosophila melanogaster euchromatic genome: a systematic review

Sima Misra; Madeline A. Crosby; Christopher J. Mungall; Beverley B. Matthews; Kathryn S. Campbell; Pavel Hradecky; Yanmei Huang; Joshua S Kaminker; Gillian Millburn; Simon E Prochnik; Christopher D. Smith; Jonathan L Tupy; Eleanor J Whitfield; Leyla Bayraktaroglu; Benjamin P. Berman; Brian Bettencourt; Susan E. Celniker; Aubrey D.N.J. de Grey; Rachel Drysdale; Nomi L. Harris; John Richter; Susan Russo; Andrew J. Schroeder; ShengQiang Shu; Mark Stapleton; Chihiro Yamada; Michael Ashburner; William M. Gelbart; Gerald M. Rubin; Suzanna E. Lewis

BackgroundThe recent completion of the Drosophila melanogaster genomic sequence to high quality and the availability of a greatly expanded set of Drosophila cDNA sequences, aligning to 78% of the predicted euchromatic genes, afforded FlyBase the opportunity to significantly improve genomic annotations. We made the annotation process more rigorous by inspecting each gene visually, utilizing a comprehensive set of curation rules, requiring traceable evidence for each gene model, and comparing each predicted peptide to SWISS-PROT and TrEMBL sequences.ResultsAlthough the number of predicted protein-coding genes in Drosophila remains essentially unchanged, the revised annotation significantly improves gene models, resulting in structural changes to 85% of the transcripts and 45% of the predicted proteins. We annotated transposable elements and non-protein-coding RNAs as new features, and extended the annotation of untranslated (UTR) sequences and alternative transcripts to include more than 70% and 20% of genes, respectively. Finally, cDNA sequence provided evidence for dicistronic transcripts, neighboring genes with overlapping UTRs on the same DNA sequence strand, alternatively spliced genes that encode distinct, non-overlapping peptides, and numerous nested genes.ConclusionsIdentification of so many unusual gene models not only suggests that some mechanisms for gene regulation are more prevalent than previously believed, but also underscores the complex challenges of eukaryotic gene prediction. At present, experimental data and human curation remain essential to generate high-quality genome annotations.


Cell | 1985

The Abdominal Region of the Bithorax Complex

François Karch; Barbara Weiffenbach; Mark Peifer; Welcome Bender; Ian Duncan; Susan E. Celniker; Madeline A. Crosby; E. B. Lewis

The homeotic mutations in the right half of the bithorax complex of Drosophila cause segmental transformations in the second through the eighth segments of the fly. A chromosomal walk in the bithorax complex has now been extended 215 kb through the right half of the complex, and lesions for over 40 mutations have been located on the DNA map. The mutations can be grouped in a series of phenotypic classes, one for each abdominal segment, although each mutation typically affects more than one segment. The mutant lesions of each class are clustered, and they are aligned on the chromosome in the order of the body segments that they affect. Complementation tests suggest interactions between widely spaced DNA regions; indeed, the right half cannot be split anywhere without some loss of function.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

FlyBase: genomes by the dozen

Madeline A. Crosby; Joshua L. Goodman; Victor Strelets; Peili Zhang; William M. Gelbart

FlyBase () is the primary database of genetic and genomic data for the insect family Drosophilidae. Historically, Drosophila melanogaster has been the most extensively studied species in this family, but recent determination of the genomic sequences of an additional 11 Drosophila species opens up new avenues of research for other Drosophila species. This extensive sequence resource, encompassing species with well-defined phylogenetic relationships, provides a model system for comparative genomic analyses. FlyBase has developed tools to facilitate access to and navigation through this invaluable new data collection.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

FlyBase: introduction of the Drosophila melanogaster Release 6 reference genome assembly and large-scale migration of genome annotations

Gilberto dos Santos; Andrew J. Schroeder; Joshua L. Goodman; Victor B. Strelets; Madeline A. Crosby; Jim Thurmond; David B. Emmert; William M. Gelbart

Release 6, the latest reference genome assembly of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, was released by the Berkeley Drosophila Genome Project in 2014; it replaces their previous Release 5 genome assembly, which had been the reference genome assembly for over 7 years. With the enormous amount of information now attached to the D. melanogaster genome in public repositories and individual laboratories, the replacement of the previous assembly by the new one is a major event requiring careful migration of annotations and genome-anchored data to the new, improved assembly. In this report, we describe the attributes of the new Release 6 reference genome assembly, the migration of FlyBase genome annotations to this new assembly, how genome features on this new assembly can be viewed in FlyBase (http://flybase.org) and how users can convert coordinates for their own data to the corresponding Release 6 coordinates.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2017

FlyBase at 25: looking to the future

L. Sian Gramates; Steven J. Marygold; Gilberto dos Santos; Jose-Maria Urbano; Giulia Antonazzo; Beverley B. Matthews; Alix J. Rey; Christopher J. Tabone; Madeline A. Crosby; David B. Emmert; Kathleen Falls; Joshua L. Goodman; Yanhui Hu; Laura Ponting; Andrew J. Schroeder; Victor B. Strelets; Jim Thurmond; Pinglei Zhou

Since 1992, FlyBase (flybase.org) has been an essential online resource for the Drosophila research community. Concentrating on the most extensively studied species, Drosophila melanogaster, FlyBase includes information on genes (molecular and genetic), transgenic constructs, phenotypes, genetic and physical interactions, and reagents such as stocks and cDNAs. Access to data is provided through a number of tools, reports, and bulk-data downloads. Looking to the future, FlyBase is expanding its focus to serve a broader scientific community. In this update, we describe new features, datasets, reagent collections, and data presentations that address this goal, including enhanced orthology data, Human Disease Model Reports, protein domain search and visualization, concise gene summaries, a portal for external resources, video tutorials and the FlyBase Community Advisory Group.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

A deletion-generator compound element allows deletion saturation analysis for genomewide phenotypic annotation

François Huet; Jeffrey Lu; Kyl V. Myrick; L. Ryan Baugh; Madeline A. Crosby; William M. Gelbart

With the available eukaryotic genome sequences, there are predictions of thousands of previously uncharacterized genes without known function or available mutational variant. Thus, there is an urgent need for efficient genetic tools for genomewide phenotypic analysis. Here we describe such a tool: a deletion-generator technology that exploits properties of a double transposable element to produce molecularly defined deletions at high density and with high efficiency. This double element, called P{wHy}, is composed of a “deleter” element hobo, bracketed by two genetic markers and inserted into a “carrier” P element. We have used this P{wHy} element in Drosophila melanogaster to generate sets of nested deletions of sufficient coverage to discriminate among every transcription unit within 60 kb of the starting insertion site. Because these two types of mobile elements, carrier and deleter, can be found in other species, our strategy should be applicable to phenotypic analysis in a variety of model organisms.


Genome Biology | 2002

Annotation of the Drosophila melanogastereuchromatic genome: a systematic review

Sima Misra; Madeline A. Crosby; Chris Mungall; Beverley B. Matthews; Kathryn S. Campbell; Pavel Hradecky; Yanmei Huang; Joshua S Kaminker; Gillian Millburn; Simon E Prochnik; Christopher D. Smith; Jonathan L Tupy; Eleanor J Whitfield; Leyla Bayraktaroglu; Benjamin P. Berman; Brian Bettencourt; Susan E. Celniker; Aubrey D.N.J. de Grey; Rachel Drysdale; Nomi L Harris; John Richter; Susan Russo; Andrew J. Schroeder; ShengQiang Shu; Mark Stapleton; Chihiro Yamada; Michael Ashburner; William M. Gelbart; Gerald M. Rubin; Suzanna E. Lewis

BackgroundThe recent completion of the Drosophila melanogaster genomic sequence to high quality and the availability of a greatly expanded set of Drosophila cDNA sequences, aligning to 78% of the predicted euchromatic genes, afforded FlyBase the opportunity to significantly improve genomic annotations. We made the annotation process more rigorous by inspecting each gene visually, utilizing a comprehensive set of curation rules, requiring traceable evidence for each gene model, and comparing each predicted peptide to SWISS-PROT and TrEMBL sequences.ResultsAlthough the number of predicted protein-coding genes in Drosophila remains essentially unchanged, the revised annotation significantly improves gene models, resulting in structural changes to 85% of the transcripts and 45% of the predicted proteins. We annotated transposable elements and non-protein-coding RNAs as new features, and extended the annotation of untranslated (UTR) sequences and alternative transcripts to include more than 70% and 20% of genes, respectively. Finally, cDNA sequence provided evidence for dicistronic transcripts, neighboring genes with overlapping UTRs on the same DNA sequence strand, alternatively spliced genes that encode distinct, non-overlapping peptides, and numerous nested genes.ConclusionsIdentification of so many unusual gene models not only suggests that some mechanisms for gene regulation are more prevalent than previously believed, but also underscores the complex challenges of eukaryotic gene prediction. At present, experimental data and human curation remain essential to generate high-quality genome annotations.

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Susan E. Celniker

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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