The UCSC Genome Browser database: update 2010

Brooke Rhead(Pennsylvania State University), Donna Karolchik(Pennsylvania State University), Robert M. Kuhn(Pennsylvania State University), Angie S. Hinrichs(Pennsylvania State University), Ann S. Zweig(Pennsylvania State University), Pauline A. Fujita(Pennsylvania State University), Mark Diekhans(Pennsylvania State University), Kayla Smith(Pennsylvania State University), Kate R. Rosenbloom(Pennsylvania State University), Brian J. Raney(Pennsylvania State University), A. Pohl(Pennsylvania State University), Michael Pheasant(Pennsylvania State University), Laurence Meyer(Pennsylvania State University), Katrina Learned(Pennsylvania State University), F. Hsu(Pennsylvania State University), Jennifer Hillman‐Jackson(Pennsylvania State University), Rachel Harte(Pennsylvania State University), Belinda Giardine(Pennsylvania State University), Timothy R. Dreszer(Pennsylvania State University), Hiram Clawson(Pennsylvania State University), G. P. Barber(Pennsylvania State University), D. Haussler(Pennsylvania State University), W. James Kent(Pennsylvania State University)
Nucleic Acids Research
November 11, 2009
Cited by 576Open Access
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Abstract

The University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC) Genome Browser website (http://genome.ucsc.edu/) provides a large database of publicly available sequence and annotation data along with an integrated tool set for examining and comparing the genomes of organisms, aligning sequence to genomes, and displaying and sharing users' own annotation data. As of September 2009, genomic sequence and a basic set of annotation 'tracks' are provided for 47 organisms, including 14 mammals, 10 non-mammal vertebrates, 3 invertebrate deuterostomes, 13 insects, 6 worms and a yeast. New data highlights this year include an updated human genome browser, a 44-species multiple sequence alignment track, improved variation and phenotype tracks and 16 new genome-wide ENCODE tracks. New features include drag-and-zoom navigation, a Wiki track for user-added annotations, new custom track formats for large datasets (bigBed and bigWig), a new multiple alignment output tool, links to variation and protein structure tools, in silico PCR utility enhancements, and improved track configuration tools.


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