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Dive into the research topics where Maria Keays is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Keays.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

ArrayExpress update—trends in database growth and links to data analysis tools

Gabriella Rustici; Nikolay Kolesnikov; Marco Brandizi; Tony Burdett; Miroslaw Dylag; Ibrahim Emam; Anna Farne; Emma Hastings; Jon Ison; Maria Keays; Natalja Kurbatova; James Malone; Roby Mani; Annalisa Mupo; Rui Pedro Pereira; Ekaterina Pilicheva; Johan Rung; Anjan Sharma; Y. Amy Tang; Tobias Ternent; Andrew Tikhonov; Danielle Welter; Eleanor Williams; Alvis Brazma; Helen E. Parkinson; Ugis Sarkans

The ArrayExpress Archive of Functional Genomics Data (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress) is one of three international functional genomics public data repositories, alongside the Gene Expression Omnibus at NCBI and the DDBJ Omics Archive, supporting peer-reviewed publications. It accepts data generated by sequencing or array-based technologies and currently contains data from almost a million assays, from over 30 000 experiments. The proportion of sequencing-based submissions has grown significantly over the last 2 years and has reached, in 2012, 15% of all new data. All data are available from ArrayExpress in MAGE-TAB format, which allows robust linking to data analysis and visualization tools, including Bioconductor and GenomeSpace. Additionally, R objects, for microarray data, and binary alignment format files, for sequencing data, have been generated for a significant proportion of ArrayExpress data.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

ArrayExpress update—simplifying data submissions

Nikolay Kolesnikov; Emma Hastings; Maria Keays; Olga Melnichuk; Y. Amy Tang; Eleanor Williams; Miroslaw Dylag; Natalja Kurbatova; Marco Brandizi; Tony Burdett; Karyn Megy; Ekaterina Pilicheva; Gabriella Rustici; Andrew Tikhonov; Helen Parkinson; Robert Petryszak; Ugis Sarkans; Alvis Brazma

The ArrayExpress Archive of Functional Genomics Data (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress) is an international functional genomics database at the European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI) recommended by most journals as a repository for data supporting peer-reviewed publications. It contains data from over 7000 public sequencing and 42 000 array-based studies comprising over 1.5 million assays in total. The proportion of sequencing-based submissions has grown significantly over the last few years and has doubled in the last 18 months, whilst the rate of microarray submissions is growing slightly. All data in ArrayExpress are available in the MAGE-TAB format, which allows robust linking to data analysis and visualization tools and standardized analysis. The main development over the last two years has been the release of a new data submission tool Annotare, which has reduced the average submission time almost 3-fold. In the near future, Annotare will become the only submission route into ArrayExpress, alongside MAGE-TAB format-based pipelines. ArrayExpress is a stable and highly accessed resource. Our future tasks include automation of data flows and further integration with other EMBL-EBI resources for the representation of multi-omics data.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

Expression Atlas update—a database of gene and transcript expression from microarray- and sequencing-based functional genomics experiments

Robert Petryszak; Tony Burdett; Benedetto Fiorelli; Nuno A. Fonseca; Mar Gonzàlez-Porta; Emma Hastings; Wolfgang Huber; Simon Jupp; Maria Keays; Nataliya Kryvych; Julie McMurry; John C. Marioni; James P. Malone; Karine Megy; Gabriella Rustici; Amy Tang; Jan Taubert; Eleanor Williams; Oliver Mannion; Helen Parkinson; Alvis Brazma

Expression Atlas (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/gxa) is a value-added database providing information about gene, protein and splice variant expression in different cell types, organism parts, developmental stages, diseases and other biological and experimental conditions. The database consists of selected high-quality microarray and RNA-sequencing experiments from ArrayExpress that have been manually curated, annotated with Experimental Factor Ontology terms and processed using standardized microarray and RNA-sequencing analysis methods. The new version of Expression Atlas introduces the concept of ‘baseline’ expression, i.e. gene and splice variant abundance levels in healthy or untreated conditions, such as tissues or cell types. Differential gene expression data benefit from an in-depth curation of experimental intent, resulting in biologically meaningful ‘contrasts’, i.e. instances of differential pairwise comparisons between two sets of biological replicates. Other novel aspects of Expression Atlas are its strict quality control of raw experimental data, up-to-date RNA-sequencing analysis methods, expression data at the level of gene sets, as well as genes and a more powerful search interface designed to maximize the biological value provided to the user.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

Expression Atlas update—an integrated database of gene and protein expression in humans, animals and plants

Robert Petryszak; Maria Keays; Y. Amy Tang; Nuno A. Fonseca; Elisabet Barrera; Tony Burdett; Anja Füllgrabe; Alfonso Muñoz-Pomer Fuentes; Simon Jupp; Satu Koskinen; Oliver Mannion; Laura Huerta; Karine Megy; Catherine Snow; Eleanor Williams; Mitra Barzine; Emma Hastings; Hendrik Weisser; James C. Wright; Pankaj Jaiswal; Wolfgang Huber; Jyoti S. Choudhary; Helen Parkinson; Alvis Brazma

Expression Atlas (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/gxa) provides information about gene and protein expression in animal and plant samples of different cell types, organism parts, developmental stages, diseases and other conditions. It consists of selected microarray and RNA-sequencing studies from ArrayExpress, which have been manually curated, annotated with ontology terms, checked for high quality and processed using standardised analysis methods. Since the last update, Atlas has grown seven-fold (1572 studies as of August 2015), and incorporates baseline expression profiles of tissues from Human Protein Atlas, GTEx and FANTOM5, and of cancer cell lines from ENCODE, CCLE and Genentech projects. Plant studies constitute a quarter of Atlas data. For genes of interest, the user can view baseline expression in tissues, and differential expression for biologically meaningful pairwise comparisons—estimated using consistent methodology across all of Atlas. Our first proteomics study in human tissues is now displayed alongside transcriptomics data in the same tissues. Novel analyses and visualisations include: ‘enrichment’ in each differential comparison of GO terms, Reactome, Plant Reactome pathways and InterPro domains; hierarchical clustering (by baseline expression) of most variable genes and experimental conditions; and, for a given gene-condition, distribution of baseline expression across biological replicates.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

Gramene 2016: comparative plant genomics and pathway resources

Marcela K. Tello-Ruiz; Joshua C. Stein; Sharon Wei; Justin Preece; Andrew Olson; Sushma Naithani; Vindhya Amarasinghe; Palitha Dharmawardhana; Yinping Jiao; Joseph Mulvaney; Sunita Kumari; Kapeel Chougule; Justin Elser; Bo Wang; James Thomason; Daniel M. Bolser; Arnaud Kerhornou; Brandon Walts; Nuno A. Fonseca; Laura Huerta; Maria Keays; Y. Amy Tang; Helen Parkinson; Antonio Fabregat; Sheldon J. McKay; Joel Weiser; Peter D'Eustachio; Lincoln Stein; Robert Petryszak; Paul J. Kersey

Gramene (http://www.gramene.org) is an online resource for comparative functional genomics in crops and model plant species. Its two main frameworks are genomes (collaboration with Ensembl Plants) and pathways (The Plant Reactome and archival BioCyc databases). Since our last NAR update, the database website adopted a new Drupal management platform. The genomes section features 39 fully assembled reference genomes that are integrated using ontology-based annotation and comparative analyses, and accessed through both visual and programmatic interfaces. Additional community data, such as genetic variation, expression and methylation, are also mapped for a subset of genomes. The Plant Reactome pathway portal (http://plantreactome.gramene.org) provides a reference resource for analyzing plant metabolic and regulatory pathways. In addition to ∼200 curated rice reference pathways, the portal hosts gene homology-based pathway projections for 33 plant species. Both the genome and pathway browsers interface with the EMBL-EBIs Expression Atlas to enable the projection of baseline and differential expression data from curated expression studies in plants. Gramenes archive website (http://archive.gramene.org) continues to provide previously reported resources on comparative maps, markers and QTL. To further aid our users, we have also introduced a live monthly educational webinar series and a Gramene YouTube channel carrying video tutorials.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2017

Open Targets: a platform for therapeutic target identification and validation

Gautier Koscielny; Peter An; Denise R. Carvalho-Silva; Jennifer A. Cham; Luca Fumis; Rippa Gasparyan; Samiul Hasan; Nikiforos Karamanis; Michael Maguire; Eliseo Papa; Andrea Pierleoni; Miguel Pignatelli; Theo Platt; Francis Rowland; Priyanka Wankar; A. Patrícia Bento; Tony Burdett; Antonio Fabregat; Simon A. Forbes; Anna Gaulton; Cristina Yenyxe Gonzalez; Henning Hermjakob; Anne Hersey; Steven Jupe; Şenay Kafkas; Maria Keays; Catherine Leroy; Francisco-Javier Lopez; María Paula Magariños; James Malone

We have designed and developed a data integration and visualization platform that provides evidence about the association of known and potential drug targets with diseases. The platform is designed to support identification and prioritization of biological targets for follow-up. Each drug target is linked to a disease using integrated genome-wide data from a broad range of data sources. The platform provides either a target-centric workflow to identify diseases that may be associated with a specific target, or a disease-centric workflow to identify targets that may be associated with a specific disease. Users can easily transition between these target- and disease-centric workflows. The Open Targets Validation Platform is accessible at https://www.targetvalidation.org.


Nature Biotechnology | 2017

Discovering and linking public omics data sets using the Omics Discovery Index.

Yasset Perez-Riverol; Mingze Bai; Felipe da Veiga Leprevost; Silvano Squizzato; Young Mi Park; Kenneth Haug; Adam J. Carroll; Dylan Spalding; Justin Paschall; Mingxun Wang; Noemi del-Toro; Tobias Ternent; Peng Zhang; Nicola Buso; Nuno Bandeira; Eric W. Deutsch; David S. Campbell; Ronald C. Beavis; Reza M. Salek; Ugis Sarkans; Robert Petryszak; Maria Keays; Eoin Fahy; Manish Sud; Shankar Subramaniam; Ariana Barberá; Rafael C. Jimenez; Alexey I. Nesvizhskii; Susanna-Assunta Sansone; Christoph Steinbeck

Yasset Perez-Riverola,†,*, Mingze Baia,b,c,†, Felipe da Veiga Leprevostd, Silvano Squizzatoa, Young Mi Parka, Kenneth Hauga, Adam J. Carrolle, Dylan Spaldinga, Justin Paschalla, Mingxun Wangf, Noemi del-Toroa, Tobias Ternenta, Peng Zhangd,g, Nicola Busoa, Nuno Bandeiraf, Eric W. Deutschh, David S Campbellh, Ronald C. Beavisi, Reza M. Saleka, Ugis Sarkansa, Robert Petryszaka, Maria Keaysa, Eoin Fahyj, Manish Sudj, Shankar Subramaniamj, Ariana Barberak, Rafael C. Jiménezl, Alexey I. Nesvizhskiid, SusannaAssunta Sansonem, Christoph Steinbecka, Rodrigo Lopeza, Juan Antonio Vizcaínoa, Peipei Pingn, and Henning Hermjakoba,c,* aEuropean Molecular Biology Laboratory, European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI), Wellcome Trust Genome Campus, Hinxton, Cambridge, CB10 1SD, UK


Nucleic Acids Research | 2018

Expression Atlas: gene and protein expression across multiple studies and organisms

Irene Papatheodorou; Nuno A. Fonseca; Maria Keays; Y. Amy Tang; Elisabet Barrera; Wojciech Bażant; Melissa Burke; Anja Füllgrabe; Alfonso Munoz-Pomer Fuentes; Nancy George; Laura Huerta; Satu Koskinen; Suhaib Mohammed; Matthew Geniza; Justin Preece; Pankaj Jaiswal; Andrew F. Jarnuczak; Wolfgang Huber; Oliver Stegle; Juan Antonio Vizcaíno; Alvis Brazma; Robert Petryszak

Abstract Expression Atlas (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/gxa) is an added value database that provides information about gene and protein expression in different species and contexts, such as tissue, developmental stage, disease or cell type. The available public and controlled access data sets from different sources are curated and re-analysed using standardized, open source pipelines and made available for queries, download and visualization. As of August 2017, Expression Atlas holds data from 3,126 studies across 33 different species, including 731 from plants. Data from large-scale RNA sequencing studies including Blueprint, PCAWG, ENCODE, GTEx and HipSci can be visualized next to each other. In Expression Atlas, users can query genes or gene-sets of interest and explore their expression across or within species, tissues, developmental stages in a constitutive or differential context, representing the effects of diseases, conditions or experimental interventions. All processed data matrices are available for direct download in tab-delimited format or as R-data. In addition to the web interface, data sets can now be searched and downloaded through the Expression Atlas R package. Novel features and visualizations include the on-the-fly analysis of gene set overlaps and the option to view gene co-expression in experiments investigating constitutive gene expression across tissues or other conditions.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2017

Plant Reactome: a resource for plant pathways and comparative analysis

Sushma Naithani; Justin Preece; Peter D'Eustachio; Parul Gupta; Vindhya Amarasinghe; Palitha Dharmawardhana; Guanming Wu; Antonio Fabregat; Justin Elser; Joel Weiser; Maria Keays; Alfonso Munoz-Pomer Fuentes; Robert Petryszak; Lincoln Stein; Doreen Ware; Pankaj Jaiswal

Plant Reactome (http://plantreactome.gramene.org/) is a free, open-source, curated plant pathway database portal, provided as part of the Gramene project. The database provides intuitive bioinformatics tools for the visualization, analysis and interpretation of pathway knowledge to support genome annotation, genome analysis, modeling, systems biology, basic research and education. Plant Reactome employs the structural framework of a plant cell to show metabolic, transport, genetic, developmental and signaling pathways. We manually curate molecular details of pathways in these domains for reference species Oryza sativa (rice) supported by published literature and annotation of well-characterized genes. Two hundred twenty-two rice pathways, 1025 reactions associated with 1173 proteins, 907 small molecules and 256 literature references have been curated to date. These reference annotations were used to project pathways for 62 model, crop and evolutionarily significant plant species based on gene homology. Database users can search and browse various components of the database, visualize curated baseline expression of pathway-associated genes provided by the Expression Atlas and upload and analyze their Omics datasets. The database also offers data access via Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) and in various standardized pathway formats, such as SBML and BioPAX.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Mitochondrial Complex I Is a Global Regulator of Secondary Metabolism, Virulence and Azole Sensitivity in Fungi

Michael Bromley; Anna Johns; Emma Davies; Marcin G. Fraczek; Jane Mabey Gilsenan; Natalya Kurbatova; Maria Keays; Misha Kapushesky; Marta Gut; Ivo Gut; David W. Denning; Paul Bowyer

Recent estimates of the global burden of fungal disease suggest that that their incidence has been drastically underestimated and that mortality may rival that of malaria or tuberculosis. Azoles are the principal class of antifungal drug and the only available oral treatment for fungal disease. Recent occurrence and increase in azole resistance is a major concern worldwide. Known azole resistance mechanisms include over—expression of efflux pumps and mutation of the gene encoding the target protein cyp51a, however, for one of the most important fungal pathogens of humans, Aspergillus fumigatus, much of the observed azole resistance does not appear to involve such mechanisms. Here we present evidence that azole resistance in A. fumigatus can arise through mutation of components of mitochondrial complex I. Gene deletions of the 29.9KD subunit of this complex are azole resistant, less virulent and exhibit dysregulation of secondary metabolite gene clusters in a manner analogous to deletion mutants of the secondary metabolism regulator, LaeA. Additionally we observe that a mutation leading to an E180D amino acid change in the 29.9 KD subunit is strongly associated with clinical azole resistant A. fumigatus isolates. Evidence presented in this paper suggests that complex I may play a role in the hypoxic response and that one possible mechanism for cell death during azole treatment is a dysfunctional hypoxic response that may be restored by dysregulation of complex I. Both deletion of the 29.9 KD subunit of complex I and azole treatment alone profoundly change expression of gene clusters involved in secondary metabolism and immunotoxin production raising potential concerns about long term azole therapy.

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Robert Petryszak

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Nuno A. Fonseca

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Alvis Brazma

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Laura Huerta

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Y. Amy Tang

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Anja Füllgrabe

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Antonio Fabregat

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Elisabet Barrera

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Tony Burdett

European Bioinformatics Institute

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