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

Robert Petryszak(European Bioinformatics Institute), Tony Burdett(European Bioinformatics Institute), Benedetto Fiorelli(European Bioinformatics Institute), Nuno A. Fonseca(European Bioinformatics Institute), Mar Gonzàlez-Porta(European Bioinformatics Institute), Emma Hastings(European Bioinformatics Institute), Wolfgang Huber(European Bioinformatics Institute), Simon Jupp(European Bioinformatics Institute), Maria Keays(European Bioinformatics Institute), Nataliya Kryvych(European Bioinformatics Institute), Julie A. McMurry(European Bioinformatics Institute), John C. Marioni(European Bioinformatics Institute), James Malone(European Bioinformatics Institute), Karyn Mégy(European Bioinformatics Institute), Gabriella Rustici(European Bioinformatics Institute), Amy Tang(European Bioinformatics Institute), Jan Taubert(European Bioinformatics Institute), Eleanor Williams(European Bioinformatics Institute), Oliver Mannion(European Bioinformatics Institute), Helen Parkinson(European Bioinformatics Institute), Alvis Brāzma(European Bioinformatics Institute)
Nucleic Acids Research
December 4, 2013
Cited by 386Open Access
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Abstract

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.


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