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Featured researches published by Yiya Yang.


Neuroinformatics | 2003

EMAP and EMAGE: a framework for understanding spatially organized data.

Richard Baldock; Jonathan Bard; Albert Burger; Nicholas Burton; Jeffrey H. Christiansen; Guangjie Feng; Bill Hill; Derek Houghton; Matthew H. Kaufman; Jianguo Rao; James Sharpe; Allyson Ross; Peter Stevenson; Shanmugasundaram Venkataraman; Andrew M. Waterhouse; Yiya Yang; Duncan Davidson

The Edinburgh Mouse Atlas Project (EMAP) is a time-series of mouse-embryo volumetric models. The models provide a context-free spatial framework onto which structural interpretations and experimental data can be mapped. This enables collation, comparison, and query of complex spatial patterns with respect to each other and with respect to known or hypothesized structure. The atlas also includes a time-dependent anatomical ontology and mapping between the ontology and the spatial models in the form of delineated anatomical regions or tissues. The models provide a natural, graphical context for browsing and visualizing complex data.The Edinburgh Mouse Atlas Gene-Expression Database (EMAGE) is one of the first applications of the EMAP framework and provides a spatially mapped gene-expression database with associated tools for data mapping, submission, and query. In this article, we describe the underlying principles of the Atlas and the gene-expression database, and provide a practical introduction to the use of the EMAP and EMAGE tools, including use of new techniques for whole body gene-expression data capture and mapping.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

EMAGE mouse embryo spatial gene expression database: 2010 update

Lorna Richardson; Shanmugasundaram Venkataraman; Peter Stevenson; Yiya Yang; Nicholas Burton; Jianguo Rao; Malcolm Fisher; Richard Baldock; Duncan Davidson; Jeffrey H. Christiansen

EMAGE (http://www.emouseatlas.org/emage) is a freely available online database of in situ gene expression patterns in the developing mouse embryo. Gene expression domains from raw images are extracted and integrated spatially into a set of standard 3D virtual mouse embryos at different stages of development, which allows data interrogation by spatial methods. An anatomy ontology is also used to describe sites of expression, which allows data to be queried using text-based methods. Here, we describe recent enhancements to EMAGE including: the release of a completely re-designed website, which offers integration of many different search functions in HTML web pages, improved user feedback and the ability to find similar expression patterns at the click of a button; back-end refactoring from an object oriented to relational architecture, allowing associated SQL access; and the provision of further access by standard formatted URLs and a Java API. We have also increased data coverage by sourcing from a greater selection of journals and developed automated methods for spatial data annotation that are being applied to spatially incorporate the genome-wide (∼19 000 gene) ‘EURExpress’ dataset into EMAGE.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2006

EMAGE: a spatial database of gene expression patterns during mouse embryo development

Jeffrey H. Christiansen; Yiya Yang; Shanmugasundaram Venkataraman; Lorna Richardson; Peter Stevenson; Nicholas Burton; Richard Baldock; Duncan Davidson

EMAGE () is a freely available, curated database of gene expression patterns generated by in situ techniques in the developing mouse embryo. It is unique in that it contains standardized spatial representations of the sites of gene expression for each gene, denoted against a set of virtual reference embryo models. As such, the data can be interrogated in a novel and abstract manner by using space to define a query. Accompanying the spatial representations of gene expression patterns are text descriptions of the sites of expression, which also allows searching of the data by more conventional text-based methods.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2008

EMAGE--Edinburgh Mouse Atlas of Gene Expression: 2008 update.

Shanmugasundaram Venkataraman; Peter Stevenson; Yiya Yang; Lorna Richardson; Nicholas Burton; Thomas P. Perry; Paul R. Smith; Richard Baldock; Duncan Davidson; Jeffrey H. Christiansen

EMAGE (http://genex.hgu.mrc.ac.uk/Emage/database) is a database of in situ gene expression patterns in the developing mouse embryo. Domains of expression from raw data images are spatially integrated into a set of standard 3D virtual mouse embryos at different stages of development, allowing data interrogation by spatial methods. Sites of expression are also described using an anatomy ontology and data can be queried using text-based methods. Here we describe recent enhancements to EMAGE which include advances in spatial search methods including: a refined local spatial similarity search algorithm, a method to allow global spatial comparison of patterns in EMAGE and subsequent hierarchical-clustering, and spatial searches across multiple stages of development. In addition, we have extended data access by the introduction of web services and new HTML-based search interfaces, which allow access to data that has not yet been spatially annotated. We have also started incorporating full 3D images of gene expression that have been generated using optical projection tomography (OPT).


Mammalian Genome | 2012

eMouseAtlas, EMAGE, and the spatial dimension of the transcriptome

Chris Armit; Shanmugasundaram Venkataraman; Lorna Richardson; Peter Stevenson; Julie Moss; Liz Graham; Allyson Ross; Yiya Yang; Nicholas Burton; Jianguo Rao; Bill Hill; Dominic Rannie; Mike Wicks; Duncan Davidson; Richard Baldock

AbstracteMouseAtlas (www.emouseatlas.org) is a comprehensive online resource to visualise mouse development and investigate gene expression in the mouse embryo. We have recently deployed a completely redesigned Mouse Anatomy Atlas website (www.emouseatlas.org/emap/ema) that allows users to view 3D embryo reconstructions, delineated anatomy, and high-resolution histological sections. A new feature of the website is the IIP3D web tool that allows a user to view arbitrary sections of 3D embryo reconstructions using a web browser. This feature provides interactive access to very high-volume 3D images via a tiled pan-and-zoom style interface and circumvents the need to download large image files for visualisation. eMouseAtlas additionally includes EMAGE (Edinburgh Mouse Atlas of Gene Expression) (www.emouseatlas.org/emage), a freely available, curated online database of in situ gene expression patterns, where gene expression domains extracted from raw data images are spatially mapped into atlas embryo models. In this way, EMAGE introduces a spatial dimension to transcriptome data and allows exploration of the spatial similarity between gene expression patterns. New features of the EMAGE interface allow complex queries to be built, and users can view and compare multiple gene expression patterns. EMAGE now includes mapping of 3D gene expression domains captured using the imaging technique optical projection tomography. 3D mapping uses WlzWarp, an open-source software tool developed by eMouseAtlas.


Journal of Anatomy | 2010

The HUDSEN Atlas: a three-dimensional (3D) spatial framework for studying gene expression in the developing human brain.

Janet Kerwin; Yiya Yang; Paloma Merchán; Subrot Sarma; Jessica Thompson; Xunxian Wang; J.E. Sandoval; Luis Puelles; Richard Baldock; Susan Lindsay

We are developing a three‐dimensional (3D) atlas of the human embryonic brain using anatomical landmarks and gene expression data to define major subdivisions through 12 stages of development [Carnegie Stages (CS) 12–23; approximately 26–56 days post conception (dpc)]. Virtual 3D anatomical models are generated from intact specimens using optical projection tomography (OPT). Using mapaint software, selected gene expression data, gathered using standard methods of in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry, are mapped to a representative 3D model for each chosen Carnegie stage. In these models, anatomical domains, defined on the basis of morphological landmarks and comparative knowledge of expression patterns in vertebrates, are linked to a developmental neuroanatomic ontology. Human gene expression patterns for genes with characteristic expression in different vertebrates (e.g. PAX6, GAD65 and OLIG2) are being used to confirm and/or refine the human anatomical domain boundaries. We have also developed interpolation software that digitally generates a full domain from partial data. Currently, the 3D models and a preliminary set of anatomical domains and ontology are available on the atlas pages along with gene expression data from approximately 100 genes in the HUDSEN Human Spatial Gene Expression Database (http://www.hudsen.org). The aim is that full 3D data will be generated from expression data used to define a more detailed set of anatomical domains linked to a more advanced anatomy ontology and all of these will be available online, contributing to the long‐term goal of the atlas, which is to help maximize the effective use and dissemination of data wherever it is generated.


Database | 2011

The BioMart interface to the eMouseAtlas gene expression database EMAGE

Peter Stevenson; Lorna Richardson; Shanmugasundaram Venkataraman; Yiya Yang; Richard Baldock

Here, we describe the BioMart interface to the eMouseAtlas gene expression database EMAGE. EMAGE is a spatiotemporal database of in situ gene expression patterns in the developing mouse embryo. BioMart provides a generic web query interface and programmable access using web services. The BioMart interface extends access to EMAGE via a powerful method of structuring complex queries and one with which users may already be familiar with from other BioMart implementations. The interface is structured into several data sets providing the user with comprehensive query access to the EMAGE data. The federated nature of BioMart allows scope for integration and cross querying of EMAGE with other similar BioMarts. Database URL: http://biomart.emouseatlas.org


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2014

EMAGE: Electronic Mouse Atlas of Gene Expression

Lorna Richardson; Peter Stevenson; Shanmugasundaram Venkataraman; Yiya Yang; Nick Burton; Jianguo Rao; Jeffrey H. Christiansen; Richard Baldock; Duncan Davidson

The EMAGE (Electronic Mouse Atlas of Gene Expression) database (http://www.emouseatlas.org/emage) allows users to perform on-line queries of mouse developmental gene expression. EMAGE data are represented spatially using a framework of 3D mouse embryo models, thus allowing uniquely spatial queries to be carried out alongside more traditional text-based queries. This spatial representation of the data also allows a comparison of spatial similarity between the expression patterns. The data are mapped to the models by a team of curators using bespoke mapping software, and the associated meta-data are curated for accuracy and completeness. The data contained in EMAGE are gathered from three main sources: from the published literature, through large-scale screens and collaborations, and via direct submissions from researchers. There are a variety of ways to query the EMAGE database via the on-line search interfaces, as well as via direct computational script-based queries. EMAGE is a free, on-line, community resource funded by the Medical Research Council, UK.


Mammalian Genome | 2015

eMouseAtlas informatics: embryo atlas and gene expression database.

Chris Armit; Lorna Richardson; Bill Hill; Yiya Yang; Richard Baldock

A significant proportion of developmental biology data is presented in the form of images at morphologically diverse stages of development. The curation of these datasets presents different challenges to that of sequence/text-based data. Towards this end, the eMouseAtlas project created a digital atlas of mouse embryo development as a means of understanding developmental anatomy and exploring the relationship between genes and development in a spatial context. Using the morphological staging system pioneered by Karl Theiler, the project has generated 3D models of post-implantation mouse development and used them as a spatial framework for the delineation of anatomical components and for archiving in situ gene expression data in the EMAGE database. This has allowed us to develop a unique online resource for mouse developmental biology. We describe here the underlying structure of the resource, as well as some of the tools that have been developed to allow users to mine the curated image data. These tools include our IIP3D/X3DOM viewer that allows 3D visualisation of anatomy and/or gene expression in the context of a web browser, and the eHistology resource that extends this functionality to allow visualisation of high-resolution cellular level images of histology sections. Furthermore, we review some of the informatics aspects of eMouseAtlas to provide a deeper insight into the use of the atlas and gene expression database.


statistical and scientific database management | 2002

The Edinburgh mouse atlas and gene-expression database: a spatio-temporal database for biological research

Albert Burger; Richard Baldock; Yiya Yang; Andrew M. Waterhouse; Derek Houghton; Nick Burton; Duncan Davidson

The Edinburgh Mouse Atlas Project (EMAP) has developed a digital atlas of mouse development which provides a bioinformatics framework to spatially reference biological data. The EMAP core database contains 3D grey-level reconstructions of the mouse embryo at various stages of development, a systematic nomenclature of the embryo anatomy, and defined 3D regions (domains) of the embryo. The reconstructions define a spatial framework for mapping data. Data front an in-situ gene-expression database is spatially mapped onto the atlas allowing the users to query gene-expression patterns using the 3D embryo model as a reference. The mouse atlas and gene-expression databases are publicly accessible through a set of Web-based tools. The system consists of a set of tools and databases, some of which reside locally on the Mouse Atlas hosts, others are remote. The middleware layer is primarily CORBA-based, but also makes use of Java servlets. Data are primarily stored in an object-oriented database system (ObjectStore). As a public bioinformatics resource, the Mouse Atlas system must be easily accessible to researchers all over the world, hence interoperability is a key issue. The Mouse Atlas is an on-going research and development project at the Medical Research Council, Human Genetics Unit, in Edinburgh. Access to its databases and further information is available through its Web site.

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Bill Hill

Western General Hospital

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Jianguo Rao

Western General Hospital

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Derek Houghton

Western General Hospital

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