An Overview of Ensembl

Ewan Birney(European Bioinformatics Institute), T. Daniel Andrews(Wellcome Sanger Institute), A. Paul Bevan(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Mario Cáccamo(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Yuan Chen(European Bioinformatics Institute), Laura Clarke(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Guy Coates(Wellcome Sanger Institute), James Cuff(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Val Curwen(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Tim Cutts(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Thomas A. Down(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Eduardo Eyras(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Xosé M. Fernández(European Bioinformatics Institute), Paul J. Gane(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Brian Gibbins(Wellcome Sanger Institute), James Gilbert(Wellcome Sanger Institute), M. Hammond(European Bioinformatics Institute), Hans-Rudolf Hotz(European Bioinformatics Institute), Vivek Iyer(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Kerstin Jekosch(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Andreas Kähäri(European Bioinformatics Institute), Arek Kasprzyk(European Bioinformatics Institute), Damian Keefe(European Bioinformatics Institute), Stephen Keenan(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Heikki Lehväslaiho(European Bioinformatics Institute), Graham McVicker(European Bioinformatics Institute), Craig Melsopp(European Bioinformatics Institute), Patrick Meidl(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Emmanuel Mongin(European Bioinformatics Institute), Roger Pettett(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Simon Potter(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Glenn Proctor(European Bioinformatics Institute), Mark G. Rae(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Steve Searle(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Guy Slater(European Bioinformatics Institute), Damian Smedley(European Bioinformatics Institute), James Smith(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Will Spooner(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Arne Stabenau(European Bioinformatics Institute), James Stalker(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Roy Storey(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Abel Ureta-Vidal(European Bioinformatics Institute), K. Cara Woodwark(European Bioinformatics Institute), Graham Cameron(European Bioinformatics Institute), Richard Durbin(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Anthony J. Cox(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Tim Hubbard(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Michèle Clamp(Wellcome Sanger Institute)
Genome Research
April 12, 2004
Cited by 474Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Ensembl (http://www.ensembl.org/) is a bioinformatics project to organize biological information around the sequences of large genomes. It is a comprehensive source of stable automatic annotation of individual genomes, and of the synteny and orthology relationships between them. It is also a framework for integration of any biological data that can be mapped onto features derived from the genomic sequence. Ensembl is available as an interactive Web site, a set of flat files, and as a complete, portable open source software system for handling genomes. All data are provided without restriction, and code is freely available. Ensembl's aims are to continue to "widen" this biological integration to include other model organisms relevant to understanding human biology as they become available; to "deepen" this integration to provide an ever more seamless linkage between equivalent components in different species; and to provide further classification of functional elements in the genome that have been previously elusive.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis