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Featured researches published by Timothy R. Dreszer.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

The UCSC Genome Browser database: extensions and updates 2011

Timothy R. Dreszer; Donna Karolchik; Ann S. Zweig; Angie S. Hinrichs; Brian J. Raney; Robert M. Kuhn; Laurence R. Meyer; Matthew C. Wong; Cricket A. Sloan; Kate R. Rosenbloom; Greg Roe; Brooke Rhead; Andy Pohl; Venkat S. Malladi; Chin H. Li; Katrina Learned; Vanessa M. Kirkup; Fan Hsu; Rachel A. Harte; Luvina Guruvadoo; Mary Goldman; Belinda Giardine; Pauline A. Fujita; Mark Diekhans; Melissa S. Cline; Hiram Clawson; Galt P. Barber; David Haussler; W. James Kent

The University of California Santa Cruz Genome Browser (http://genome.ucsc.edu) offers online public access to a growing database of genomic sequence and annotations for a wide variety of organisms. The Browser is an integrated tool set for visualizing, comparing, analyzing and sharing both publicly available and user-generated genomic data sets. In the past year, the local database has been updated with four new species assemblies, and we anticipate another four will be released by the end of 2011. Further, a large number of annotation tracks have been either added, updated by contributors, or remapped to the latest human reference genome. Among these are new phenotype and disease annotations, UCSC genes, and a major dbSNP update, which required new visualization methods. Growing beyond the local database, this year we have introduced ‘track data hubs’, which allow the Genome Browser to provide access to remotely located sets of annotations. This feature is designed to significantly extend the number and variety of annotation tracks that are publicly available for visualization and analysis from within our site. We have also introduced several usability features including track search and a context-sensitive menu of options available with a right-click anywhere on the Browsers image.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

The UCSC Genome Browser database: 2014 update

Donna Karolchik; Galt P. Barber; Jonathan Casper; Hiram Clawson; Melissa S. Cline; Mark Diekhans; Timothy R. Dreszer; Pauline A. Fujita; Luvina Guruvadoo; Maximilian Haeussler; Rachel A. Harte; Steven G. Heitner; Angie S. Hinrichs; Katrina Learned; Brian T. Lee; Chin H. Li; Brian J. Raney; Brooke Rhead; Kate R. Rosenbloom; Cricket A. Sloan; Matthew L. Speir; Ann S. Zweig; David Haussler; Robert M. Kuhn; W. James Kent

The University of California Santa Cruz (UCSC) Genome Browser (http://genome.ucsc.edu) offers online public access to a growing database of genomic sequence and annotations for a large collection of organisms, primarily vertebrates, with an emphasis on the human and mouse genomes. The Browser’s web-based tools provide an integrated environment for visualizing, comparing, analysing and sharing both publicly available and user-generated genomic data sets. As of September 2013, the database contained genomic sequence and a basic set of annotation ‘tracks’ for ∼90 organisms. Significant new annotations include a 60-species multiple alignment conservation track on the mouse, updated UCSC Genes tracks for human and mouse, and several new sets of variation and ENCODE data. New software tools include a Variant Annotation Integrator that returns predicted functional effects of a set of variants uploaded as a custom track, an extension to UCSC Genes that displays haplotype alleles for protein-coding genes and an expansion of data hubs that includes the capability to display remotely hosted user-provided assembly sequence in addition to annotation data. To improve European access, we have added a Genome Browser mirror (http://genome-euro.ucsc.edu) hosted at Bielefeld University in Germany.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

ENCODE Data in the UCSC Genome Browser: year 5 update

Kate R. Rosenbloom; Cricket A. Sloan; Venkat S. Malladi; Timothy R. Dreszer; Katrina Learned; Vanessa M. Kirkup; Matthew C. Wong; Morgan Maddren; Ruihua Fang; Steven G. Heitner; Brian T. Lee; Galt P. Barber; Rachel A. Harte; Mark Diekhans; Jeffrey C. Long; Steven P. Wilder; Ann S. Zweig; Donna Karolchik; Robert M. Kuhn; David Haussler; W. James Kent

The Encyclopedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE), http://encodeproject.org, has completed its fifth year of scientific collaboration to create a comprehensive catalog of functional elements in the human genome, and its third year of investigations in the mouse genome. Since the last report in this journal, the ENCODE human data repertoire has grown by 898 new experiments (totaling 2886), accompanied by a major integrative analysis. In the mouse genome, results from 404 new experiments became available this year, increasing the total to 583, collected during the course of the project. The University of California, Santa Cruz, makes this data available on the public Genome Browser http://genome.ucsc.edu for visual browsing and data mining. Download of raw and processed data files are all supported. The ENCODE portal provides specialized tools and information about the ENCODE data sets.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

The UCSC Genome Browser database: 2015 update

Kate R. Rosenbloom; Joel Armstrong; Galt P. Barber; Jonathan Casper; Hiram Clawson; Mark Diekhans; Timothy R. Dreszer; Pauline A. Fujita; Luvina Guruvadoo; Maximilian Haeussler; Rachel A. Harte; Steven G. Heitner; Glenn Hickey; Angie S. Hinrichs; Robert Hubley; Donna Karolchik; Katrina Learned; Brian T. Lee; Chin H. Li; Karen H. Miga; Ngan Nguyen; Benedict Paten; Brian J. Raney; Arian Smit; Matthew L. Speir; Ann S. Zweig; David Haussler; Robert M. Kuhn; W. James Kent

Launched in 2001 to showcase the draft human genome assembly, the UCSC Genome Browser database (http://genome.ucsc.edu) and associated tools continue to grow, providing a comprehensive resource of genome assemblies and annotations to scientists and students worldwide. Highlights of the past year include the release of a browser for the first new human genome reference assembly in 4 years in December 2013 (GRCh38, UCSC hg38), a watershed comparative genomics annotation (100-species multiple alignment and conservation) and a novel distribution mechanism for the browser (GBiB: Genome Browser in a Box). We created browsers for new species (Chinese hamster, elephant shark, minke whale), ‘mined the web’ for DNA sequences and expanded the browser display with stacked color graphs and region highlighting. As our user community increasingly adopts the UCSC track hub and assembly hub representations for sharing large-scale genomic annotation data sets and genome sequencing projects, our menu of public data hubs has tripled.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

ENCODE whole-genome data in the UCSC Genome Browser

Kate R. Rosenbloom; Timothy R. Dreszer; Michael Pheasant; Galt P. Barber; Laurence R. Meyer; Andy Pohl; Brian J. Raney; Ting Wang; Angie S. Hinrichs; Ann S. Zweig; Pauline A. Fujita; Katrina Learned; Brooke Rhead; Kayla E. Smith; Robert M. Kuhn; Donna Karolchik; David Haussler; W. James Kent

The Encyclopedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE) project is an international consortium of investigators funded to analyze the human genome with the goal of producing a comprehensive catalog of functional elements. The ENCODE Data Coordination Center at The University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC) is the primary repository for experimental results generated by ENCODE investigators. These results are captured in the UCSC Genome Bioinformatics database and download server for visualization and data mining via the UCSC Genome Browser and companion tools (Rhead et al. The UCSC Genome Browser Database: update 2010, in this issue). The ENCODE web portal at UCSC (http://encodeproject.org or http://genome.ucsc.edu/ENCODE) provides information about the ENCODE data and convenient links for access.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2011

ENCODE whole-genome data in the UCSC genome browser (2011 update)

Brian J. Raney; Melissa S. Cline; Kate R. Rosenbloom; Timothy R. Dreszer; Katrina Learned; Galt P. Barber; Laurence R. Meyer; Cricket A. Sloan; Venkat S. Malladi; Krishna M. Roskin; Bernard B. Suh; Angie S. Hinrichs; Hiram Clawson; Ann S. Zweig; Vanessa M. Kirkup; Pauline A. Fujita; Brooke Rhead; Kayla E. Smith; Andy Pohl; Robert M. Kuhn; Donna Karolchik; David Haussler; W. James Kent

The ENCODE project is an international consortium with a goal of cataloguing all the functional elements in the human genome. The ENCODE Data Coordination Center (DCC) at the University of California, Santa Cruz serves as the central repository for ENCODE data. In this role, the DCC offers a collection of high-throughput, genome-wide data generated with technologies such as ChIP-Seq, RNA-Seq, DNA digestion and others. This data helps illuminate transcription factor-binding sites, histone marks, chromatin accessibility, DNA methylation, RNA expression, RNA binding and other cell-state indicators. It includes sequences with quality scores, alignments, signals calculated from the alignments, and in most cases, element or peak calls calculated from the signal data. Each data set is available for visualization and download via the UCSC Genome Browser (http://genome.ucsc.edu/). ENCODE data can also be retrieved using a metadata system that captures the experimental parameters of each assay. The ENCODE web portal at UCSC (http://encodeproject.org/) provides information about the ENCODE data and links for access.


Bioinformatics | 2014

Track data hubs enable visualization of user-defined genome-wide annotations on the UCSC Genome Browser

Brian J. Raney; Timothy R. Dreszer; Galt P. Barber; Hiram Clawson; Pauline A. Fujita; Ting Wang; Ngan Nguyen; Benedict Paten; Ann S. Zweig; Donna Karolchik; W. James Kent

Summary: Track data hubs provide an efficient mechanism for visualizing remotely hosted Internet-accessible collections of genome annotations. Hub datasets can be organized, configured and fully integrated into the University of California Santa Cruz (UCSC) Genome Browser and accessed through the familiar browser interface. For the first time, individuals can use the complete browser feature set to view custom datasets without the overhead of setting up and maintaining a mirror. Availability and implementation: Source code for the BigWig, BigBed and Genome Browser software is freely available for non-commercial use at http://hgdownload.cse.ucsc.edu/admin/jksrc.zip, implemented in C and supported on Linux. Binaries for the BigWig and BigBed creation and parsing utilities may be downloaded at http://hgdownload.cse.ucsc.edu/admin/exe/. Binary Alignment/Map (BAM) and Variant Call Format (VCF)/tabix utilities are available from http://samtools.sourceforge.net/ and http://vcftools.sourceforge.net/. The UCSC Genome Browser is publicly accessible at http://genome.ucsc.edu. Contact: [email protected]


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

ENCODE data at the ENCODE portal

Cricket A. Sloan; Esther T. Chan; Jean M. Davidson; Venkat S. Malladi; J. Seth Strattan; Benjamin C. Hitz; Idan Gabdank; Aditi K. Narayanan; Marcus Ho; Brian T. Lee; Laurence D. Rowe; Timothy R. Dreszer; Greg Roe; Nikhil R. Podduturi; Forrest Tanaka; Eurie L. Hong; J. Michael Cherry

The Encyclopedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE) Project is in its third phase of creating a comprehensive catalog of functional elements in the human genome. This phase of the project includes an expansion of assays that measure diverse RNA populations, identify proteins that interact with RNA and DNA, probe regions of DNA hypersensitivity, and measure levels of DNA methylation in a wide range of cell and tissue types to identify putative regulatory elements. To date, results for almost 5000 experiments have been released for use by the scientific community. These data are available for searching, visualization and download at the new ENCODE Portal (www.encodeproject.org). The revamped ENCODE Portal provides new ways to browse and search the ENCODE data based on the metadata that describe the assays as well as summaries of the assays that focus on data provenance. In addition, it is a flexible platform that allows integration of genomic data from multiple projects. The portal experience was designed to improve access to ENCODE data by relying on metadata that allow reusability and reproducibility of the experiments.


Database | 2016

Principles of metadata organization at the ENCODE data coordination center

Eurie L. Hong; Cricket A. Sloan; Esther T. Chan; Jean M. Davidson; Venkat S. Malladi; J. Seth Strattan; Benjamin C. Hitz; Idan Gabdank; Aditi K. Narayanan; Marcus Ho; Brian T. Lee; Laurence D. Rowe; Timothy R. Dreszer; Greg Roe; Nikhil R. Podduturi; Forrest Tanaka; Jason A Hilton; J. Michael Cherry

The Encyclopedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE) Data Coordinating Center (DCC) is responsible for organizing, describing and providing access to the diverse data generated by the ENCODE project. The description of these data, known as metadata, includes the biological sample used as input, the protocols and assays performed on these samples, the data files generated from the results and the computational methods used to analyze the data. Here, we outline the principles and philosophy used to define the ENCODE metadata in order to create a metadata standard that can be applied to diverse assays and multiple genomic projects. In addition, we present how the data are validated and used by the ENCODE DCC in creating the ENCODE Portal (https://www.encodeproject.org/). Database URL: www.encodeproject.org


Nucleic Acids Research | 2018

The Encyclopedia of DNA elements (ENCODE): data portal update

Carrie A Davis; Benjamin C. Hitz; Cricket A. Sloan; Esther T. Chan; Jean M. Davidson; Idan Gabdank; Jason A Hilton; Kriti Jain; Ulugbek K Baymuradov; Aditi K. Narayanan; Kathrina C. Onate; Keenan Graham; Stuart R. Miyasato; Timothy R. Dreszer; J. Seth Strattan; Otto Jolanki; Forrest Tanaka; J. Michael Cherry

Abstract The Encyclopedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE) Data Coordinating Center has developed the ENCODE Portal database and website as the source for the data and metadata generated by the ENCODE Consortium. Two principles have motivated the design. First, experimental protocols, analytical procedures and the data themselves should be made publicly accessible through a coherent, web-based search and download interface. Second, the same interface should serve carefully curated metadata that record the provenance of the data and justify its interpretation in biological terms. Since its initial release in 2013 and in response to recommendations from consortium members and the wider community of scientists who use the Portal to access ENCODE data, the Portal has been regularly updated to better reflect these design principles. Here we report on these updates, including results from new experiments, uniformly-processed data from other projects, new visualization tools and more comprehensive metadata to describe experiments and analyses. Additionally, the Portal is now home to meta(data) from related projects including Genomics of Gene Regulation, Roadmap Epigenome Project, Model organism ENCODE (modENCODE) and modERN. The Portal now makes available over 13000 datasets and their accompanying metadata and can be accessed at: https://www.encodeproject.org/.

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Ann S. Zweig

University of California

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David Haussler

University of California

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Galt P. Barber

University of California

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W. James Kent

University of California

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Brian J. Raney

University of California

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