ENCODE whole-genome data in the UCSC Genome Browser

Kate R. Rosenbloom(University of California, Santa Cruz), Timothy R. Dreszer(University of California, Santa Cruz), Michael Pheasant(University of California, Santa Cruz), G. P. Barber(University of California, Santa Cruz), Laurence Meyer(University of California, Santa Cruz), A. Pohl(University of California, Santa Cruz), Brian J. Raney(University of California, Santa Cruz), T. Wang(University of California, Santa Cruz), Angie S. Hinrichs(University of California, Santa Cruz), Ann S. Zweig(University of California, Santa Cruz), Pauline A. Fujita(University of California, Santa Cruz), Katrina Learned(University of California, Santa Cruz), Brooke Rhead(University of California, Santa Cruz), Kayla Smith(University of California, Santa Cruz), Robert M. Kuhn(University of California, Santa Cruz), Donna Karolchik(University of California, Santa Cruz), David Haussler(University of California, Santa Cruz), W. James Kent(University of California, Santa Cruz)
Nucleic Acids Research
November 17, 2009
Cited by 352Open Access
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Abstract

The Encyclopedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE) project is an international consortium of investigators funded to analyze the human genome with the goal of producing a comprehensive catalog of functional elements. The ENCODE Data Coordination Center at The University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC) is the primary repository for experimental results generated by ENCODE investigators. These results are captured in the UCSC Genome Bioinformatics database and download server for visualization and data mining via the UCSC Genome Browser and companion tools (Rhead et al. The UCSC Genome Browser Database: update 2010, in this issue). The ENCODE web portal at UCSC (http://encodeproject.org or http://genome.ucsc.edu/ENCODE) provides information about the ENCODE data and convenient links for access.


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