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1.
J Mol Biol ; : 168518, 2024 Mar 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38458603

RESUMO

The Mouse Variation Registry (MVAR) resource is a scalable registry of mouse single nucleotide variants and small indels and variant annotation. The resource accepts data in standard Variant Call Format (VCF) and assesses the uniqueness of the submitted variants via a canonicalization process. Novel variants are assigned a unique, persistent MVAR identifier; variants that are equivalent to an existing variant in the resource are associated with the existing identifier. Annotations for variant type, molecular consequence, impact, and genomic region in the context of specific transcripts and protein sequences are generated using Ensembl's Variant Effect Predictor (VEP) and Jannovar. Access to the data and annotations in MVAR are supported via an Application Programming Interface (API) and web application. Researchers can search the resource by gene symbol, genomic region, variant (expressed in Human Genome Variation Society syntax), refSNP identifiers, or MVAR identifiers. Tabular search results can be filtered by variant annotations (variant type, molecular consequence, impact, variant region) and viewed according to variant distribution across mouse strains. The registry currently comprises more than 99 million canonical single nucleotide variants for 581 strains of mice. MVAR is accessible from https://mvar.jax.org.

2.
Genome Res ; 34(1): 145-159, 2024 Feb 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38290977

RESUMO

Hundreds of inbred mouse strains and intercross populations have been used to characterize the function of genetic variants that contribute to disease. Thousands of disease-relevant traits have been characterized in mice and made publicly available. New strains and populations including consomics, the collaborative cross, expanded BXD, and inbred wild-derived strains add to existing complex disease mouse models, mapping populations, and sensitized backgrounds for engineered mutations. The genome sequences of inbred strains, along with dense genotypes from others, enable integrated analysis of trait-variant associations across populations, but these analyses are hampered by the sparsity of genotypes available. Moreover, the data are not readily interoperable with other resources. To address these limitations, we created a uniformly dense variant resource by harmonizing multiple data sets. Missing genotypes were imputed using the Viterbi algorithm with a data-driven technique that incorporates local phylogenetic information, an approach that is extendable to other model organisms. The result is a web- and programmatically accessible data service called GenomeMUSter, comprising single-nucleotide variants covering 657 strains at 106.8 million segregating sites. Interoperation with phenotype databases, analytic tools, and other resources enable a wealth of applications, including multitrait, multipopulation meta-analysis. We show this in cross-species comparisons of type 2 diabetes and substance use disorder meta-analyses, leveraging mouse data to characterize the likely role of human variant effects in disease. Other applications include refinement of mapped loci and prioritization of strain backgrounds for disease modeling to further unlock extant mouse diversity for genetic and genomic studies in health and disease.


Assuntos
Diabetes Mellitus Tipo 2 , Humanos , Camundongos , Animais , Filogenia , Genótipo , Camundongos Endogâmicos , Fenótipo , Mutação , Variação Genética
3.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Aug 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37609331

RESUMO

Hundreds of inbred laboratory mouse strains and intercross populations have been used to functionalize genetic variants that contribute to disease. Thousands of disease relevant traits have been characterized in mice and made publicly available. New strains and populations including the Collaborative Cross, expanded BXD and inbred wild-derived strains add to set of complex disease mouse models, genetic mapping resources and sensitized backgrounds against which to evaluate engineered mutations. The genome sequences of many inbred strains, along with dense genotypes from others could allow integrated analysis of trait - variant associations across populations, but these analyses are not feasible due to the sparsity of genotypes available. Moreover, the data are not readily interoperable with other resources. To address these limitations, we created a uniformly dense data resource by harmonizing multiple variant datasets. Missing genotypes were imputed using the Viterbi algorithm with a data-driven technique that incorporates local phylogenetic information, an approach that is extensible to other model organism species. The result is a web- and programmatically-accessible data service called GenomeMUSter ( https://muster.jax.org ), comprising allelic data covering 657 strains at 106.8M segregating sites. Interoperation with phenotype databases, analytic tools and other resources enable a wealth of applications including multi-trait, multi-population meta-analysis. We demonstrate this in a cross-species comparison of the meta-analysis of Type 2 Diabetes and of substance use disorders, resulting in the more specific characterization of the role of human variant effects in light of mouse phenotype data. Other applications include refinement of mapped loci and prioritization of strain backgrounds for disease modeling to further unlock extant mouse diversity for genetic and genomic studies in health and disease.

4.
Mamm Genome ; 34(4): 509-519, 2023 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37581698

RESUMO

The Mouse Phenome Database continues to serve as a curated repository and analysis suite for measured attributes of members of diverse mouse populations. The repository includes annotation to community standard ontologies and guidelines, a database of allelic states for 657 mouse strains, a collection of protocols, and analysis tools for flexible, interactive, user directed analyses that increasingly integrates data across traits and populations. The database has grown from its initial focus on a standard set of inbred strains to include heterogeneous mouse populations such as the Diversity Outbred and mapping crosses and well as Collaborative Cross, Hybrid Mouse Diversity Panel, and recombinant inbred strains. Most recently the system has expanded to include data from the International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium. Collectively these data are accessible by API and provided with an interactive tool suite that enables users' persistent selection, storage, and operation on collections of measures. The tool suite allows basic analyses, advanced functions with dynamic visualization including multi-population meta-analysis, multivariate outlier detection, trait pattern matching, correlation analyses and other functions. The data resources and analysis suite provide users a flexible environment in which to explore the basis of phenotypic variation in health and disease across the lifespan.


Assuntos
Fenômica , Camundongos , Animais , Camundongos Endogâmicos , Fenótipo
5.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 51(D1): D1067-D1074, 2023 01 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36330959

RESUMO

The Mouse Phenome Database (MPD; https://phenome.jax.org; RRID:SCR_003212), supported by the US National Institutes of Health, is a Biomedical Data Repository listed in the Trans-NIH Biomedical Informatics Coordinating Committee registry. As an increasingly FAIR-compliant and TRUST-worthy data repository, MPD accepts phenotype and genotype data from mouse experiments and curates, organizes, integrates, archives, and distributes those data using community standards. Data are accompanied by rich metadata, including widely used ontologies and detailed protocols. Data are from all over the world and represent genetic, behavioral, morphological, and physiological disease-related characteristics in mice at baseline or those exposed to drugs or other treatments. MPD houses data from over 6000 strains and populations, representing many reproducible strain types and heterogenous populations such as the Diversity Outbred where each mouse is unique but can be genotyped throughout the genome. A suite of analysis tools is available to aggregate, visualize, and analyze these data within and across studies and populations in an increasingly traceable and reproducible manner. We have refined existing resources and developed new tools to continue to provide users with access to consistent, high-quality data that has translational relevance in a modernized infrastructure that enables interaction with a suite of bioinformatics analytic and data services.


Assuntos
Bases de Dados Genéticas , Fenômica , Camundongos , Animais , Camundongos Endogâmicos , Fenótipo , Genótipo
6.
J Synchrotron Radiat ; 22(3): 853-8, 2015 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25931106

RESUMO

Synchrotron light source facilities worldwide generate terabytes of data in numerous incompatible data formats from a wide range of experiment types. The Data Analysis WorkbeNch (DAWN) was developed to address the challenge of providing a single visualization and analysis platform for data from any synchrotron experiment (including single-crystal and powder diffraction, tomography and spectroscopy), whilst also being sufficiently extensible for new specific use case analysis environments to be incorporated (e.g. ARPES, PEEM). In this work, the history and current state of DAWN are presented, with two case studies to demonstrate specific functionality. The first is an example of a data processing and reduction problem using the generic tools, whilst the second shows how these tools can be targeted to a specific scientific area.

7.
Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr ; 68(Pt 8): 975-84, 2012 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22868763

RESUMO

The automation of beam delivery, sample handling and data analysis, together with increasing photon flux, diminishing focal spot size and the appearance of fast-readout detectors on synchrotron beamlines, have changed the way that many macromolecular crystallography experiments are planned and executed. Screening for the best diffracting crystal, or even the best diffracting part of a selected crystal, has been enabled by the development of microfocus beams, precise goniometers and fast-readout detectors that all require rapid feedback from the initial processing of images in order to be effective. All of these advances require the coupling of data feedback to the experimental control system and depend on immediate online data-analysis results during the experiment. To facilitate this, a Data Analysis WorkBench (DAWB) for the flexible creation of complex automated protocols has been developed. Here, example workflows designed and implemented using DAWB are presented for enhanced multi-step crystal characterizations, experiments involving crystal reorientation with kappa goniometers, crystal-burning experiments for empirically determining the radiation sensitivity of a crystal system and the application of mesh scans to find the best location of a crystal to obtain the highest diffraction quality. Beamline users interact with the prepared workflows through a specific brick within the beamline-control GUI MXCuBE.


Assuntos
Cristalografia por Raios X/métodos , Substâncias Macromoleculares/química , Proteínas/química , Automação , Bioquímica/métodos , Biologia Computacional/métodos , Gráficos por Computador , Cristalização , Desenho de Equipamento , Projetos de Pesquisa , Software , Síncrotrons , Interface Usuário-Computador , Fluxo de Trabalho
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