Expression Atlas update—an integrated database of gene and protein expression in humans, animals and plants

Robert Petryszak(European Bioinformatics Institute), Maria Keays(European Bioinformatics Institute), Amy Tang(European Bioinformatics Institute), Nuno A. Fonseca(European Bioinformatics Institute), Elisabet Barrera(European Bioinformatics Institute), Tony Burdett(European Bioinformatics Institute), Anja Füllgrabe(European Bioinformatics Institute), Alfonso Muñoz-Pomer Fuentes(European Bioinformatics Institute), Simon Jupp(European Bioinformatics Institute), Satu Koskinen(European Bioinformatics Institute), Oliver Mannion(European Bioinformatics Institute), Laura Huerta(European Bioinformatics Institute), Karyn Mégy(European Bioinformatics Institute), Catherine Snow(European Bioinformatics Institute), Eleanor Williams(European Bioinformatics Institute), Mitra Barzine(European Bioinformatics Institute), Emma Hastings(European Bioinformatics Institute), Hendrik Weisser(Wellcome Sanger Institute), James C. Wright(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Pankaj Jaiswal(Oregon State University), Wolfgang Huber(European Bioinformatics Institute), Jyoti S. Choudhary(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Helen Parkinson(European Bioinformatics Institute), Alvis Brāzma(European Bioinformatics Institute)
Nucleic Acids Research
October 19, 2015
Cited by 563Open Access
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Abstract

Expression Atlas (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/gxa) provides information about gene and protein expression in animal and plant samples of different cell types, organism parts, developmental stages, diseases and other conditions. It consists of selected microarray and RNA-sequencing studies from ArrayExpress, which have been manually curated, annotated with ontology terms, checked for high quality and processed using standardised analysis methods. Since the last update, Atlas has grown seven-fold (1572 studies as of August 2015), and incorporates baseline expression profiles of tissues from Human Protein Atlas, GTEx and FANTOM5, and of cancer cell lines from ENCODE, CCLE and Genentech projects. Plant studies constitute a quarter of Atlas data. For genes of interest, the user can view baseline expression in tissues, and differential expression for biologically meaningful pairwise comparisons-estimated using consistent methodology across all of Atlas. Our first proteomics study in human tissues is now displayed alongside transcriptomics data in the same tissues. Novel analyses and visualisations include: 'enrichment' in each differential comparison of GO terms, Reactome, Plant Reactome pathways and InterPro domains; hierarchical clustering (by baseline expression) of most variable genes and experimental conditions; and, for a given gene-condition, distribution of baseline expression across biological replicates.


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