29 results on '"Tim F. Rayner"'
Search Results
2. ArrayExpress update - from an archive of functional genomics experiments to the atlas of gene expression.
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Helen E. Parkinson, Misha Kapushesky, Nikolay Kolesnikov, Gabriella Rustici, Mohammadreza Shojatalab, Niran Abeygunawardena, Hugo Bérubé, Miroslaw Dylag, Ibrahim Emam, Anna Farne, Ele Holloway, Margus Lukk, James Malone, Roby Mani, Ekaterina Pilicheva, Tim F. Rayner, Faisal Ibne Rezwan, Anjan Sharma, Eleanor Williams, Xiangqun Zheng Bradley, Tomasz Adamusiak, Marco Brandizi, Tony Burdett, Richard Coulson, Maria Krestyaninova, Pavel Kurnosov, Eamonn Maguire, Sudeshna Guha Neogi, Philippe Rocca-Serra, Susanna-Assunta Sansone, Nataliya Sklyar, Mengyao Zhao, Ugis Sarkans, and Alvis Brazma
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- 2009
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3. ArrayExpress - a public database of microarray experiments and gene expression profiles.
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Helen E. Parkinson, Misha Kapushesky, Mohammadreza Shojatalab, Niran Abeygunawardena, Richard Coulson, Anna Farne, Ele Holloway, Nikolay Kolesnykov, P. Lilja, Margus Lukk, Roby Mani, Tim F. Rayner, Anjan Sharma, E. William, Ugis Sarkans, and Alvis Brazma
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- 2007
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4. The ArrayExpress gene expression database: a software engineering and implementation perspective.
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Ugis Sarkans, Helen E. Parkinson, Gonzalo Garcia Lara, Ahmet Oezcimen, Anjan Sharma, Niran Abeygunawardena, Sergio Contrino, Ele Holloway, Philippe Rocca-Serra, Gaurab Mukherjee, Mohammadreza Shojatalab, Misha Kapushesky, Susanna-Assunta Sansone, Anna Farne, Tim F. Rayner, and Alvis Brazma
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- 2005
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5. Importing ArrayExpress datasets into R/Bioconductor.
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Audrey Kauffmann, Tim F. Rayner, Helen E. Parkinson, Misha Kapushesky, Margus Lukk, Alvis Brazma, and Wolfgang Huber
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- 2009
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6. ArrayExpress - a public repository for microarray gene expression data at the EBI.
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Helen E. Parkinson, Ugis Sarkans, Mohammadreza Shojatalab, Niran Abeygunawardena, Sergio Contrino, Richard Coulson, Anna Farne, Gonzalo Garcia Lara, Ele Holloway, Misha Kapushesky, P. Lilja, Gaurab Mukherjee, Ahmet Oezcimen, Tim F. Rayner, Philippe Rocca-Serra, Anjan Sharma, Susanna-Assunta Sansone, and Alvis Brazma
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- 2005
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7. MAGETabulator, a suite of tools to support the microarray data format MAGE-TAB.
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Tim F. Rayner, Faisal Ibne Rezwan, Margus Lukk, Xiangqun Zheng Bradley, Anna Farne, Ele Holloway, James Malone, Eleanor Williams, and Helen E. Parkinson
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- 2009
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8. Mutational landscape of a chemically-induced mouse model of liver cancer
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Margus Lukk, Duncan T. Odom, Tim F. Rayner, Frances Connor, Sarah J. Aitken, and Christine Feig
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0303 health sciences ,Point mutation ,Wnt signaling pathway ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Genome ,3. Good health ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Hepatocellular carcinoma ,Cancer research ,medicine ,HRAS ,Liver cancer ,Gene ,Exome sequencing ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
Carcinogen-induced mouse models of liver cancer are used extensively to study the pathogenesis of the disease and have a critical role in validating candidate therapeutics. These models can recapitulate molecular and histological features of human disease. However, it is not known if the spectra of genomic alterations driving these mouse tumour genomes are comparable to those found in humans. Here, we provide a detailed characterisation of the exome-wide pattern of mutations in tumours from mice exposed to diethylnitrosamine (DEN), a commonly used model of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). DEN-initiated tumours had a high, uniform number of somatic single nucleotide variants (SNVs), with very few insertions, deletions or copy number alterations, consistent with the known genotoxic action of DEN. Exposure of hepatocytes to DEN left a reproducible mutational imprint in resulting tumour exomes which we could computationally reconstruct using six known COSMIC mutational signatures. The tumours carried a high diversity of low-incidence, non-synonymous point mutations in many oncogenes and tumour suppressors, reflecting the stochastic introduction of SNVs into the hepatocyte genome by the carcinogen. We identified four recurrently mutated genes that were putative oncogenic drivers of HCC in this model. Every neoplasm carried activating hotspot mutations either in codon 61 of Hras, in codon 584 of Braf or in codon 254 of Egfr. Truncating mutations of Apc occurred in 21% of neoplasms, which were exclusively carcinomas supporting a role for deregulation of Wnt/β-catenin signalling in cancer progression. Conclusion: Our study provides detailed insight into the mutational landscape of tumours arising in a commonly-used carcinogen model of hepatocellular carcinoma, facilitating the future use of this model to understand the human disease.
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- 2018
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9. A simple spreadsheet-based, MIAME-supportive format for microarray data: MAGE-TAB.
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Tim F. Rayner, Philippe Rocca-Serra, Paul T. Spellman, Helen C. Causton, Anna Farne, Ele Holloway, Rafael A. Irizarry, Junmin Liu, Donald Maier, Michael Miller 0001, Kjell Petersen, John Quackenbush, Gavin Sherlock, Christian J. Stoeckert Jr., Joseph White, Patricia L. Whetzel, Farrell Wymore, Helen E. Parkinson, Ugis Sarkans, Catherine A. Ball, and Alvis Brazma
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- 2006
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10. Genome-wide methylation analyses of primary human leukocyte subsets identifies functionally important cell-type–specific hypomethylated regions
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Christopher J. Joyce, Alison J. Coffey, Tim F. Rayner, Kenneth G. C. Smith, Matthias Zilbauer, Priit Palta, Aarno Palotie, Paul A. Lyons, and Christine Clark
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Adult ,Male ,Transcription, Genetic ,Immunology ,B-Lymphocyte Subsets ,Genome-wide association study ,Biology ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Biochemistry ,Phagocytes, Granulocytes, and Myelopoiesis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,T-Lymphocyte Subsets ,Gene expression ,Humans ,Epigenetics ,030304 developmental biology ,Genetics ,0303 health sciences ,Genome, Human ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Methylation ,DNA Methylation ,Middle Aged ,3. Good health ,Immune System Diseases ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,DNA methylation ,Human genome ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,DNA hypomethylation - Abstract
DNA methylation is an important mechanism by which gene transcription and hence cellular function are regulated. Here, we provide detailed functional genome-wide methylome maps of 5 primary peripheral blood leukocyte subsets including T cells, B cells, monocytes/macrophages, and neutrophils obtained from healthy individuals. A comparison of these methylomes revealed highly specific cell-lineage and cell-subset methylation profiles. DNA hypomethylation is known to be permissive for gene expression and we identified cell-subset-specific hypomethylated regions (HMRs) that strongly correlate with gene transcription levels suggesting these HMRs may regulate corresponding cell functions. Single-nucleotide polymorphisms associated with immune-mediated disease in genome-wide association studies preferentially localized to these cell-specific regulatory HMRs, offering insight into pathogenesis by highlighting cell subsets in which specific epigenetic changes may drive disease. Our data provide a valuable reference tool for researchers aiming to investigate the role of DNA methylation in regulating primary leukocyte function in health and immune-mediated disease.
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- 2013
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11. MiR-210 Is Induced by Oct-2, Regulates B Cells, and Inhibits Autoantibody Production
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Elena Vigorito, Cherie Blenkiron, Vera Schwierzeck, Lynn M. Corcoran, David C. Thomas, Inga-Lill Mårtensson, Eric A. Miska, Lorna B. Jarvis, Tim F. Rayner, Paul A. Lyons, Haydn M. Prosser, Yingting Mok, Allan Bradley, David R. Withers, and Kenneth G. C. Smith
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Transcriptome ,Downregulation and upregulation ,Immunology ,microRNA ,Gene expression ,Autoantibody ,Immunology and Allergy ,Transfection ,Cell cycle ,Biology ,Molecular biology ,Germline - Abstract
MicroRNAs (MiRs) are small, noncoding RNAs that regulate gene expression posttranscriptionally. In this study, we show that MiR-210 is induced by Oct-2, a key transcriptional mediator of B cell activation. Germline deletion of MiR-210 results in the development of autoantibodies from 5 mo of age. Overexpression of MiR-210 in vivo resulted in cell autonomous expansion of the B1 lineage and impaired fitness of B2 cells. Mice overexpressing MiR-210 exhibited impaired class-switched Ab responses, a finding confirmed in wild-type B cells transfected with a MiR-210 mimic. In vitro studies demonstrated defects in cellular proliferation and cell cycle entry, which were consistent with the transcriptomic analysis demonstrating downregulation of genes involved in cellular proliferation and B cell activation. These findings indicate that Oct-2 induction of MiR-210 provides a novel inhibitory mechanism for the control of B cells and autoantibody production.
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- 2013
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12. Aging increases cell-to-cell transcriptional variability upon immune stimulation
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Hung-Chang Chen, John C. Marioni, Duncan T. Odom, Nils Eling, Lovorka Stojic, Michael J. T. Stubbington, Sarah A. Teichmann, Catalina A. Vallejos, Tim F. Rayner, Aleksandra A. Kolodziejczyk, Frances Connor, and Celia P. Martinez-Jimenez
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0301 basic medicine ,CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Male ,Aging ,Cell ,Cellular functions ,Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell ,Biology ,Lymphocyte Activation ,Transcriptome ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mice ,Gene expression ,medicine ,Animals ,Cellular Senescence ,Multidisciplinary ,Immune Stimulation ,Effector ,Sequence Analysis, RNA ,RNA ,Genetic Variation ,3. Good health ,Cell biology ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Single-Cell Analysis ,Immunologic Memory - Abstract
Aging is characterized by progressive loss of physiological and cellular functions, but the molecular basis of this decline remains unclear. We explored how aging affects transcriptional dynamics using single-cell RNA sequencing of unstimulated and stimulated naive and effector memory CD4+ T cells from young and old mice from two divergent species. In young animals, immunological activation drives a conserved transcriptomic switch, resulting in tightly controlled gene expression characterized by a strong up-regulation of a core activation program, coupled with a decrease in cell-to-cell variability. Aging perturbed the activation of this core program and increased expression heterogeneity across populations of cells in both species. These discoveries suggest that increased cell-to-cell transcriptional variability will be a hallmark feature of aging across most, if not all, mammalian tissues.
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- 2016
13. Interplay of cis and trans mechanisms driving transcription factor binding and gene expression evolution
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Anastasiya Kazachenka, Bianca M. Schmitt, Duncan T. Odom, John C. Marioni, David Thybert, Aisling M. Redmond, Tim F. Rayner, Anne C. Ferguson-Smith, Emily S. W. Wong, Frances Connor, Christine Feig, Paul Flicek, Feig, Christine [0000-0003-1385-7049], Ferguson-Smith, Anne [0000-0003-4996-9990], Marioni, John [0000-0001-9092-0852], Odom, Duncan [0000-0001-6201-5599], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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0301 basic medicine ,Science ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Transcription coregulator ,Biology ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Evolution, Molecular ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Molecular evolution ,Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal ,Gene expression ,Animals ,Humans ,Allele ,lcsh:Science ,Enhancer ,Transcription factor ,Alleles ,030304 developmental biology ,Regulation of gene expression ,Genetics ,0303 health sciences ,Multidisciplinary ,General transcription factor ,Pioneer factor ,Inheritance (genetic algorithm) ,Fungal genetics ,Promoter ,General Chemistry ,Chromatin ,030104 developmental biology ,TAF2 ,lcsh:Q ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Protein Binding ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
Noncoding regulatory variants play a central role in the genetics of human diseases and in evolution. Here we measure allele-specific transcription factor binding occupancy of three liver-specific transcription factors between crosses of two inbred mouse strains to elucidate the regulatory mechanisms underlying transcription factor binding variations in mammals. Our results highlight the pre-eminence of cis-acting variants on transcription factor occupancy divergence. Transcription factor binding differences linked to cis-acting variants generally exhibit additive inheritance, while those linked to trans-acting variants are most often dominantly inherited. Cis-acting variants lead to local coordination of transcription factor occupancies that decay with distance; distal coordination is also observed and may be modulated by long-range chromatin contacts. Our results reveal the regulatory mechanisms that interplay to drive transcription factor occupancy, chromatin state, and gene expression in complex mammalian cell states., “Variation in the noncoding regulatory sequences in the genome plays important roles in human disease and evolution. Here, the authors use F1 mouse hybrids to shed light on the regulatory mechanisms mediating transcription factor binding, chromatin state and gene expression in mammalian cells.”
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- 2016
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14. Genetically Distinct Subsets within ANCA-Associated Vasculitis
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Bo Baslund, Paul A. Lyons, Mark A. Little, David Clayton, Andrew J. Rees, Iva Gunnarsson, Afzal N. Chaudhry, Augusto Vaglio, Mårten Segelmark, Loïc Guillevin, Zdenka Hruskova, Jochen Zwerina, Jan Willem Cohen Tervaert, Stefan Wieczorek, Kenneth G. C. Smith, Coen A. Stegeman, Paul Brenchley, Panos Deloukas, Vladimir Tesar, Tim F. Rayner, Caroline O. S. Savage, Wolfgang L. Gross, Lorraine Harper, Jan-Stephan F. Sanders, Benjamin Wilde, Julia U Holle, Alan D. Salama, David Jayne, Sapna Trivedi, Sandosh Padmanabhan, Sophie Ohlsson, Davide Martorana, Charles D. Pusey, Thomas Neumann, Annette Bruchfeld, Richard A. Watts, Conleth Feighery, Interne Geneeskunde, RS: CARIM School for Cardiovascular Diseases, RS: MHeNs School for Mental Health and Neuroscience, Groningen Kidney Center (GKC), Translational Immunology Groningen (TRIGR), and Groningen Institute for Organ Transplantation (GIOT)
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Male ,HLA-DP Antigens ,Pathology ,Genotyping Techniques ,PATHOGENESIS ,Medizin ,Microscopic Polyangiitis ,Genome-wide association study ,DISEASE ,Major Histocompatibility Complex ,Pathogenesis ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Proteinase 3 ,immune system diseases ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,PROTEINASE-3 ,ANTINEUTROPHIL CYTOPLASMIC AUTOANTIBODIES ,NEUTROPHILS ,0303 health sciences ,General Medicine ,3. Good health ,Female ,Granulomatosis with polyangiitis ,Vasculitis ,Microscopic polyangiitis ,ANTIBODY-ASSOCIATED VASCULITIS ,Systemic vasculitis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Myeloblastin ,Anti-Neutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibody-Associated Vasculitis ,SYSTEMIC VASCULITIS ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,SMALL-VESSEL VASCULITIS ,03 medical and health sciences ,WEGENERS-GRANULOMATOSIS ,medicine ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,cardiovascular diseases ,GENOME-WIDE ASSOCIATION ,030304 developmental biology ,Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody ,030203 arthritis & rheumatology ,business.industry ,Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis ,medicine.disease ,respiratory tract diseases ,Case-Control Studies ,alpha 1-Antitrypsin ,Immunology ,business ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
BACKGROUNDAntineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-associated vasculitis is a severe condition encompassing two major syndromes: granulomatosis with polyangiitis (formerly known as Wegener's granulomatosis) and microscopic polyangiitis. Its cause is unknown, and there is debate about whether it is a single disease entity and what role ANCA plays in its pathogenesis. We investigated its genetic basis.METHODSA genomewide association study was performed in a discovery cohort of 1233 U. K. patients with ANCA-associated vasculitis and 5884 controls and was replicated in 1454 Northern European case patients and 1666 controls. Quality control, population stratification, and statistical analyses were performed according to standard criteria.RESULTSWe found both major-histocompatibility-complex (MHC) and non-MHC associations with ANCA-associated vasculitis and also that granulomatosis with polyangiitis and microscopic polyangiitis were genetically distinct. The strongest genetic associations were with the antigenic specificity of ANCA, not with the clinical syndrome. Anti-proteinase 3 ANCA was associated with HLA-DP and the genes encoding alpha(1)-antitrypsin (SERPINA1) and proteinase 3 (PRTN3) (P = 6.2x10(-89), P = 5.6x10(-12), and P = 2.6x10(-7), respectively). Anti-myeloperoxidase ANCA was associated with HLA-DQ (P = 2.1x10(-8)).CONCLUSIONSThis study confirms that the pathogenesis of ANCA-associated vasculitis has a genetic component, shows genetic distinctions between granulomatosis with polyangiitis and microscopic polyangiitis that are associated with ANCA specificity, and suggests that the response against the autoantigen proteinase 3 is a central pathogenic feature of proteinase 3 ANCA-associated vasculitis. These data provide preliminary support for the concept that proteinase 3 ANCA-associated vasculitis and myeloperoxidase ANCA-associated vasculitis are distinct autoimmune syndromes. (Funded by the British Heart Foundation and others.)
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- 2012
15. Gene expression profiling of CD8+ T cells predicts prognosis in patients with Crohn disease and ulcerative colitis
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Paul A. Lyons, Alexander Hatton, James Lee, John M. Sowerby, Tim F. Rayner, Miles Parkes, Eoin F. McKinney, Hannah M. Rickman, Edward J. Carr, Kenneth G. C. Smith, Huzefa Ratlamwala, and Francesca Bredin
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Male ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,T cell ,Immunosuppression ,General Medicine ,Disease ,CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,medicine.disease ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Ulcerative colitis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Crohn Disease ,Immunology ,Humans ,Medicine ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Colitis, Ulcerative ,Female ,business ,CD8 ,Research Article - Abstract
Crohn disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) are increasingly common, chronic forms of inflammatory bowel disease. The behavior of these diseases varies unpredictably among patients. Identification of reliable prognostic biomarkers would enable treatment to be personalized so that patients destined to experience aggressive disease could receive appropriately potent therapies from diagnosis, while those who will experience more indolent disease are not exposed to the risks and side effects of unnecessary immunosuppression. Using transcriptional profiling of circulating T cells isolated from patients with CD and UC, we identified analogous CD8+ T cell transcriptional signatures that divided patients into 2 otherwise indistinguishable subgroups. In both UC and CD, patients in these subgroups subsequently experienced very different disease courses. A substantially higher incidence of frequently relapsing disease was experienced by those patients in the subgroup defined by elevated expression of genes involved in antigen-dependent T cell responses, including signaling initiated by both IL-7 and TCR ligation — pathways previously associated with prognosis in unrelated autoimmune diseases. No equivalent correlation was observed with CD4+ T cell gene expression. This suggests that the course of otherwise distinct autoimmune and inflammatory conditions may be influenced by common pathways and identifies what we believe to be the first biomarker that can predict prognosis in both UC and CD from diagnosis, a major step toward personalized therapy.
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- 2011
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16. Foxp3+ follicular regulatory T cells control the germinal center response
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Tim F. Rayner, Axel Kallies, Devina Divekar, Adrian Liston, Sidonia Fagarasan, Laura L. Beaton, Michelle A. Linterman, Jennifer J. Hogan, Shimpei Kawamoto, Sau K. Lee, Wim Pierson, Kenneth G. C. Smith, Monika Srivastava, and Carola G. Vinuesa
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0303 health sciences ,CD40 ,T follicular helper cell differentiation ,CD28 ,Germinal center ,FOXP3 ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Molecular biology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,3. Good health ,03 medical and health sciences ,Interleukin 21 ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,biology.protein ,medicine ,Cytotoxic T cell ,B cell ,030304 developmental biology ,030215 immunology - Abstract
Follicular helper (T(FH)) cells provide crucial signals to germinal center B cells undergoing somatic hypermutation and selection that results in affinity maturation. Tight control of T(FH) numbers maintains self tolerance. We describe a population of Foxp3(+)Blimp-1(+)CD4(+) T cells constituting 10-25% of the CXCR5(high)PD-1(high)CD4(+) T cells found in the germinal center after immunization with protein antigens. These follicular regulatory T (T(FR)) cells share phenotypic characteristics with T(FH) and conventional Foxp3(+) regulatory T (T(reg)) cells yet are distinct from both. Similar to T(FH) cells, T(FR) cell development depends on Bcl-6, SLAM-associated protein (SAP), CD28 and B cells; however, T(FR) cells originate from thymic-derived Foxp3(+) precursors, not naive or T(FH) cells. T(FR) cells are suppressive in vitro and limit T(FH) cell and germinal center B cell numbers in vivo. In the absence of T(FR) cells, an outgrowth of non-antigen-specific B cells in germinal centers leads to fewer antigen-specific cells. Thus, the T(FH) differentiation pathway is co-opted by T(reg) cells to control the germinal center response.
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- 2011
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17. ArrayExpress update—from an archive of functional genomics experiments to the atlas of gene expression
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Tomasz Adamusiak, Anjan Sharma, Faisal I. Rezwan, Sudeshna Guha Neogi, Pavel Kurnosov, Susanna-Assunta Sansone, Xiangqun Zheng Bradley, Nataliya Sklyar, Ekaterina Pilicheva, Tim F. Rayner, Richard M.R. Coulson, Gabriella Rustici, Miroslaw Dylag, Ugis Sarkans, Eamonn Maguire, Ibrahim Emam, Mohammadreza Shojatalab, Marco Brandizi, Hugo Bérubé, James Malone, Philippe Rocca-Serra, Margus Lukk, Helen Parkinson, Roby Mani, Ele Holloway, Misha Kapushesky, Anna Farne, Eleanor Williams, Niran Abeygunawardena, Nikolay Kolesnikov, Tony Burdett, Mengyao Zhao, Alvis Brazma, and Maria Krestyaninova
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Genetics ,0303 health sciences ,Extramural ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Genomics ,Computational biology ,Articles ,Biology ,Public repository ,Gene expression profiling ,03 medical and health sciences ,Gene nomenclature ,0302 clinical medicine ,Differentially expressed genes ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Databases, Genetic ,Functional genomics ,030304 developmental biology ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis - Abstract
ArrayExpress http://www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress consists of three components: the ArrayExpress Repository--a public archive of functional genomics experiments and supporting data, the ArrayExpress Warehouse--a database of gene expression profiles and other bio-measurements and the ArrayExpress Atlas--a new summary database and meta-analytical tool of ranked gene expression across multiple experiments and different biological conditions. The Repository contains data from over 6000 experiments comprising approximately 200,000 assays, and the database doubles in size every 15 months. The majority of the data are array based, but other data types are included, most recently-ultra high-throughput sequencing transcriptomics and epigenetic data. The Warehouse and Atlas allow users to query for differentially expressed genes by gene names and properties, experimental conditions and sample properties, or a combination of both. In this update, we describe the ArrayExpress developments over the last two years.
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- 2008
18. The First RSBI (ISA-TAB) Workshop: 'Can a Simple Format Work for Complex Studies?'
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Marco Brandizi, Dawn Field, Jack A. Gilbert, Federico Goodsaid, Susanna-Assunta Sansone, Norman Morrison, Tim F. Rayner, Phil Jones, Andrew G. Garrow, Jennifer Fostel, Michael W. Miller, Nataliya Sklyar, Philippe Rocca-Serra, Allyson L. Lister, Stefan Wiemann, Nigel Hardy, Weida Tong, Alvis Brazma, Chris F. Taylor, and Guy Warner
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Structure (mathematical logic) ,SIMPLE (military communications protocol) ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Data management ,Environmental ethics ,computer.software_genre ,Biochemistry ,Data science ,Metadata ,Set (abstract data type) ,Environmental studies ,Work (electrical) ,Genetics ,Molecular Medicine ,Collaboration ,business ,Molecular Biology ,computer ,Biotechnology - Abstract
This article summarizes the motivation for, and the proceedings of, the first ISA-TAB workshop held December 6–8, 2007, at the EBI, Cambridge, UK. This exploratory workshop, organized by members of the Microarray Gene Expression Data (MGED) Society's Reporting Structure for Biological Investigations (RSBI) working group, brought together a group of developers of a range of collaborative systems to discuss the use of a common format to address the pressing need of reporting and communicating data and metadata from biological, biomedical, and environmental studies employing combinations of genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, and metabolomics technologies along with more conventional methodologies. The expertise of the participants comprised database development, data management, and hands-on experience in the development of data communication standards. The workshop's outcomes are set to help formalize the proposed Investigation, Study, Assay (ISA)-TAB tab-delimited format for representing and c...
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- 2008
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19. ArrayExpress—a public database of microarray experiments and gene expression profiles
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Nikolay Kolesnykov, Ele Holloway, Anjan Sharma, E. William, Roby Mani, Anna Farne, Helen Parkinson, Misha Kapushesky, P. Lilja, Niran Abeygunawardena, Tim F. Rayner, Mohammadreza Shojatalab, Richard M.R. Coulson, Margus Lukk, Ugis Sarkans, and Alvis Brazma
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Microarray ,Biology ,computer.software_genre ,Fungal Proteins ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mice ,User-Computer Interface ,0302 clinical medicine ,Gene expression ,Databases, Genetic ,Genetics ,Animals ,Humans ,030304 developmental biology ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,0303 health sciences ,Internet ,Database ,Microarray analysis techniques ,Arabidopsis Proteins ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Articles ,Data warehouse ,Rats ,Gene expression profiling ,Gene nomenclature ,Data exchange ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Functional genomics ,computer - Abstract
UNLABELLED ArrayExpress is a public database for high throughput functional genomics data. ArrayExpress consists of two parts--the ArrayExpress Repository, which is a MIAME supportive public archive of microarray data, and the ArrayExpress Data Warehouse, which is a database of gene expression profiles selected from the repository and consistently re-annotated. Archived experiments can be queried by experiment attributes, such as keywords, species, array platform, authors, journals or accession numbers. Gene expression profiles can be queried by gene names and properties, such as Gene Ontology terms and gene expression profiles can be visualized. ArrayExpress is a rapidly growing database, currently it contains data from >50,000 hybridizations and >1,500,000 individual expression profiles. ArrayExpress supports community standards, including MIAME, MAGE-ML and more recently the proposal for a spreadsheet based data exchange format: MAGE-TAB. AVAILABILITY www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress.
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- 2006
20. Plant-Based Microarray Data at the European Bioinformatics Institute. Introducing AtMIAMExpress, a Submission Tool for Arabidopsis Gene Expression Data to ArrayExpress
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Per Lilja, Ele Holloway, Sergio Contrino, Anna Farne, Gaurab Mukherjee, Tim F. Rayner, Helen Parkinson, Mohammadreza Shojatalab, Yves Moreau, Niran Abeygunawardena, Ugis Sarkans, Alvis Brazma, Steffen Durinck, Anjan Sharma, and Ahmet Oezcimen
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Physiology ,Arabidopsis ,Plant Science ,Biology ,Bioinformatics ,Bioconductor ,Upload ,Annotation ,Software ,Databases, Genetic ,Genetics ,Triticum ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,Internet ,business.industry ,Minimum information about a microarray experiment ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Academies and Institutes ,Computational Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Data warehouse ,Europe ,Hordeum vulgare ,business ,Plant Databases - Abstract
ArrayExpress is a public microarray repository founded on the Minimum Information About a Microarray Experiment (MIAME) principles that stores MIAME-compliant gene expression data. Plant-based data sets represent approximately one-quarter of the experiments in ArrayExpress. The majority are based on Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana); however, there are other data sets based on Triticum aestivum, Hordeum vulgare, and Populus subsp. AtMIAMExpress is an open-source Web-based software application for the submission of Arabidopsis-based microarray data to ArrayExpress. AtMIAMExpress exports data in MAGE-ML format for upload to any MAGE-ML-compliant application, such as J-Express and ArrayExpress. It was designed as a tool for users with minimal bioinformatics expertise, has comprehensive help and user support, and represents a simple solution to meeting the MIAME guidelines for the Arabidopsis community. Plant data are queryable both in ArrayExpress and in the Data Warehouse databases, which support queries based on gene-centric and sample-centric annotation. The AtMIAMExpress submission tool is available at http://www.ebi.ac.uk/at-miamexpress/. The software is open source and is available from http://sourceforge.net/projects/miamexpress/. For information, contact miamexpress@ebi.ac.uk.
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- 2005
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21. Enhancer evolution across 20 mammalian species
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Diego, Villar, Camille, Berthelot, Sarah, Aldridge, Tim F, Rayner, Margus, Lukk, Miguel, Pignatelli, Thomas J, Park, Robert, Deaville, Jonathan T, Erichsen, Anna J, Jasinska, James M A, Turner, Mads F, Bertelsen, Elizabeth P, Murchison, Paul, Flicek, and Duncan T, Odom
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Evolution, Molecular ,Histone Code ,Mammals ,Enhancer Elements, Genetic ,Liver ,Animals ,Humans ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,Article ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
Summary The mammalian radiation has corresponded with rapid changes in noncoding regions of the genome, but we lack a comprehensive understanding of regulatory evolution in mammals. Here, we track the evolution of promoters and enhancers active in liver across 20 mammalian species from six diverse orders by profiling genomic enrichment of H3K27 acetylation and H3K4 trimethylation. We report that rapid evolution of enhancers is a universal feature of mammalian genomes. Most of the recently evolved enhancers arise from ancestral DNA exaptation, rather than lineage-specific expansions of repeat elements. In contrast, almost all liver promoters are partially or fully conserved across these species. Our data further reveal that recently evolved enhancers can be associated with genes under positive selection, demonstrating the power of this approach for annotating regulatory adaptations in genomic sequences. These results provide important insight into the functional genetics underpinning mammalian regulatory evolution., Graphical Abstract, Highlights • Rapid enhancer and slow promoter evolution across genomes of 20 mammalian species • Enhancers are rarely conserved across these mammals • Recently evolved enhancers dominate mammalian regulatory landscapes • Unbiased mapping links candidate enhancers with lineage-specific positive selection, Comparative functional genomic analysis in 20 mammalian species reveals distinct features for the evolution of enhancers, in comparison to those of promoters, across 180 million years.
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- 2014
22. Importing ArrayExpress datasets into R/Bioconductor
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Helen Parkinson, Margus Lukk, Misha Kapushesky, Tim F. Rayner, Wolfgang Huber, Audrey Kauffmann, and Alvis Brazma
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Statistics and Probability ,Microarray ,Computer science ,Sequence analysis ,Databases and Ontologies ,Biochemistry ,Bioconductor ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Databases, Genetic ,Molecular Biology ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Integrative bioinformatics ,Information retrieval ,Sequence Analysis, RNA ,Microarray analysis techniques ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Computational Biology ,RNA ,Data science ,Computer Science Applications ,Gene expression profiling ,Applications Note ,Computational Mathematics ,ComputingMethodologies_PATTERNRECOGNITION ,Computational Theory and Mathematics ,Software ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Summary:ArrayExpress is one of the largest public repositories of microarray datasets. R/Bioconductor provides a comprehensive suite of microarray analysis and integrative bioinformatics software. However, easy ways for importing datasets from ArrayExpress into R/Bioconductor have been lacking. Here, we present such a tool that is suitable for both interactive and automated use. Availability: The ArrayExpress package is available from the Bioconductor project at http://www.bioconductor.org. A users guide and examples are provided with the package. Contact: audrey@ebi.ac.uk Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available Bioinformatics online.
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- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Copy number, linkage disequilibrium and disease association in the FCGR locus
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David Clayton, Iva Gunnarsson, Kenneth G. C. Smith, Nguyen Hoan Phu, Sarah J. Dunstan, Paul A. Lyons, Yu-Lung Lau, Heather A. Niederer, Norbert Peshu, Tim F. Rayner, Wanling Yang, Lisa C. Willcocks, Britta C. Urban, J. Anthony G. Scott, Caroline O. S. Savage, Elisabet Svenungsson, Tran Tinh Hien, Leonid Padyukov, Thomas N. Williams, Richard A. Watts, Lyons, Paul [0000-0001-7035-8997], Smith, Kenneth [0000-0003-3829-4326], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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China ,Linkage disequilibrium ,Genotype ,Receptor expression ,Receptors, IgG - genetics ,Gene Dosage ,Black People ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Locus (genetics) ,FCGR2B ,Biology ,GPI-Linked Proteins ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Linkage Disequilibrium ,White People ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Asian People ,Gene Frequency ,African Continental Ancestry Group - genetics ,Genetics ,Humans ,Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Allele ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease - ethnology - genetics ,Molecular Biology ,Alleles ,Genetics (clinical) ,030304 developmental biology ,Sweden ,0303 health sciences ,Chi-Square Distribution ,Receptors, IgG ,Association Studies Articles ,FCGR3A ,General Medicine ,FCGR3B ,Kenya ,United Kingdom ,3. Good health ,Vietnam ,Immunology ,030215 immunology - Abstract
The response of a leukocyte to immune complexes (ICs) is modulated by receptors for the Fc region of IgG (FcγRs), and alterations in their affinity or function have been associated with risk of autoimmune diseases, including systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). The low-affinity FcgR genomic locus is complex, containing regions of copy number variation (CNV) which can alter receptor expression and leukocyte responses to IgG. Combined paralogue ratio tests (PRTs) were used to distinguish three intervals within the FCGR locus which undergo CNV, and to determine FCGR gene copy number (CN). There were significant differences in FCGR3B and FCGR3A CNV profiles between Caucasian, East Asian and Kenyan populations. A previously noted association of low FCGR3B CN with SLE in Caucasians was supported [OR = 1.57 (1.08-2.27), P = 0.018], and replicated in Chinese [OR = 1.65 (1.25-2.18), P = 4 × 10 -4]. There was no association of FCGR3B CNV with vasculitis, nor with malarial or bacterial infection. Linkage disequilibrium (LD) between multi-allelic FCGR3B CNV and SLE-associated SNPs in the FCGR locus was defined for the first time. Despite LD between FCGR3B CNV and a variant in FcγRIIB (I232T) which abolishes inhibitory function, both reduced CN of FCGR3B and homozygosity of the FcγRIIB-232T allele were individually strongly associated with SLE risk. Thus CN of FCGR3B, which controls IC responses and uptake by neutrophils, and variations in FCGR2B, which controls factors such as antibody production and macrophage activation, are important in SLE pathogenesis. Further interpretations of contributions to pathogenesis by FcγRs must be made in the context of LD involving CNV regions. © The Author 2010. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved., published_or_final_version
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- 2010
24. Novel expression signatures identified by transcriptional analysis of separated leucocyte subsets in systemic lupus erythematosus and vasculitis
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David Jayne, Tim F. Rayner, Alexander Hatton, Afzal N. Chaudhry, Kenneth G. C. Smith, Paul A. Lyons, Hayley Woffendin, Maria Koukoulaki, Eoin F. McKinney, and Tom C. Freeman
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CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Male ,Transcription, Genetic ,Gene Expression ,Lymphocyte Activation ,Severity of Illness Index ,Monocytes ,0302 clinical medicine ,T-Lymphocyte Subsets ,Gene expression ,Leukocytes ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic ,Immunology and Allergy ,Basic and Translational Research ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,Aged, 80 and over ,0303 health sciences ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Connective tissue disease ,Female ,Vasculitis ,Adult ,Immunology ,Anti-Neutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibody-Associated Vasculitis ,Peripheral blood mononuclear cell ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Diagnosis, Differential ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,Rheumatology ,medicine ,Humans ,030304 developmental biology ,Aged ,Lupus erythematosus ,business.industry ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology(all) ,Gene Expression Profiling ,medicine.disease ,Gene expression profiling ,business ,030215 immunology ,Homing (hematopoietic) - Abstract
ObjectiveTo optimise a strategy for identifying gene expression signatures differentiating systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-associated vasculitis that provide insight into disease pathogenesis and identify biomarkers.Methods44 vasculitis patients, 13 SLE patients and 25 age and sex-matched controls were enrolled. CD4 and CD8 T cells, B cells, monocytes and neutrophils were isolated from each patient and, together with unseparated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), were hybridised to spotted oligonucleotide microarrays.ResultsUsing expression data obtained from purified cells a substantial number of differentially expressed genes were identified that were not detectable in the analysis of PBMC. Analysis of purified T cells identified a SLE-associated, CD4 T-cell signature consistent with type 1 interferon signalling driving the generation and survival of tissue homing T cells and thereby contributing to disease pathogenesis. Moreover, hierarchical clustering using expression data from purified monocytes provided significantly improved discrimination between the patient groups than that obtained using PBMC data, presumably because the differentially expressed genes reflect genuine differences in processes underlying disease pathogenesis.ConclusionAnalysis of leucocyte subsets enabled the identification of gene signatures of both pathogenic relevance and with better disease discrimination than those identified in PBMC. This approach thus provides substantial advantages in the search for diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers in autoimmune disease.
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- 2010
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25. A defunctioning polymorphism in FCGR2B is associated with protection against malaria but susceptibility to systemic lupus erythematosus
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Tim F. Rayner, Yu-Lung Lau, Britta C. Urban, J. Anthony G. Scott, Timothy J. Vyse, Edward J. Carr, Heather A. Niederer, Kenneth G. C. Smith, Wanling Yang, Lisa C. Willcocks, Thomas N. Williams, Norbert Peshu, and Paul A. Lyons
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Genotype ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Genome-wide association study ,Autoimmunity ,FCGR2B ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,White People ,Asian People ,parasitic diseases ,Odds Ratio ,medicine ,Humans ,Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic ,SNP ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Selection ,DNA Primers ,Genetic association study ,Autoimmune disease ,Infectious disease ,Multidisciplinary ,Lupus erythematosus ,Base Sequence ,Homozygote ,Receptors, IgG ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Bacterial septicaemia ,Biological Sciences ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,United Kingdom ,Malaria ,Minor allele frequency ,Immunology ,Hong Kong ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a multisystem autoimmune disease more prevalent in people of African and Asian origin than Caucasian origin. FcγRIIb is an inhibitory Fc receptor with a critical role in immune regulation. Mouse data suggest that FcγRIIb deficiency increases susceptibility to autoimmune disease but protects against infection. We show that a SNP in human FCGR2B that abrogates receptor function is strongly associated with susceptibility to SLE in both Caucasians and Southeast Asians. The minor allele of this SNP is more common in Southeast Asians and Africans, populations from areas where malaria is endemic, than in Caucasians. We show that homozygosity for the minor allele is associated with substantial protection against severe malaria in an East African population (odds ratio = 0.56; P = 7.1 × 10 -5). This protective effect against malaria may contribute to the higher frequency of this SNP and hence, SLE in Africans and Southeast Asians., link_to_OA_fulltext
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- 2010
26. MAGETabulator, a suite of tools to support the microarray data format MAGE-TAB
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James Malone, Tim F. Rayner, Ele Holloway, Anna Farne, Xiangqun Zheng Bradley, Margus Lukk, Eleanor Williams, Faisal I. Rezwan, and Helen Parkinson
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Statistics and Probability ,Microarray ,Computer science ,Software Validation ,Information Storage and Retrieval ,Gene Expression ,computer.software_genre ,Biochemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Software ,Databases, Genetic ,Microarray databases ,Molecular Biology ,030304 developmental biology ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,0303 health sciences ,Variant Call Format ,Database ,Microarray analysis techniques ,business.industry ,Suite ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Computer Science Applications ,Visualization ,Gene expression profiling ,Computational Mathematics ,Applications Note ,Computational Theory and Mathematics ,Data exchange ,Gene chip analysis ,business ,computer ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Algorithms - Abstract
Summary: The MAGE-TAB format for microarray data representation and exchange has been proposed by the microarray community to replace the more complex MAGE-ML format. We present a suite of tools to support MAGE-TAB generation and validation, conversion between existing formats for data exchange, visualization of the experiment designs encoded by MAGE-TAB documents and the mining of such documents for semantic content. Availability: Software is available from http://tab2mage.sourceforge.net/ Contact: tfrayner@gmail.com
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- 2008
27. A simple spreadsheet-based, MIAME-supportive format for microarray data: MAGE-TAB
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Gavin Sherlock, Christian J. Stoeckert, Michael W. Miller, Junmin Liu, Farrell Wymore, Alvis Brazma, Kjell Petersen, Ugis Sarkans, Paul T. Spellman, Ele Holloway, Helen Parkinson, Philippe Rocca-Serra, Anna Farne, Patricia L. Whetzel, Helen C. Causton, Joseph White, Donald Maier, John Quackenbush, Rafael A. Irizarry, Catherine A. Ball, and Tim F. Rayner
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Computer science ,computer.internet_protocol ,lcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,Biochemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Software ,Structural Biology ,Research community ,Databases, Genetic ,Humans ,Microarray databases ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Molecular Biology ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,SIMPLE (military communications protocol) ,Microarray analysis techniques ,business.industry ,Applied Mathematics ,Computational Biology ,Data science ,Computer Science Applications ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Commentary ,lcsh:R858-859.7 ,DNA microarray ,Software engineering ,business ,computer ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,XML - Abstract
Background Sharing of microarray data within the research community has been greatly facilitated by the development of the disclosure and communication standards MIAME and MAGE-ML by the MGED Society. However, the complexity of the MAGE-ML format has made its use impractical for laboratories lacking dedicated bioinformatics support. Results We propose a simple tab-delimited, spreadsheet-based format, MAGE-TAB, which will become a part of the MAGE microarray data standard and can be used for annotating and communicating microarray data in a MIAME compliant fashion. Conclusion MAGE-TAB will enable laboratories without bioinformatics experience or support to manage, exchange and submit well-annotated microarray data in a standard format using a spreadsheet. The MAGE-TAB format is self-contained, and does not require an understanding of MAGE-ML or XML.
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- 2006
28. ArrayExpress--a public repository for microarray gene expression data at the EBI
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Ele Holloway, Anna Farne, Anjan Sharma, Gonzalo Garcia Lara, Gaurab Mukherjee, Sergio Contrino, Tim F. Rayner, Richard M.R. Coulson, Susanna-Assunta Sansone, Alvis Brazma, P. Lilja, Misha Kapushesky, Helen Parkinson, Ahmet Oezcimen, Philippe Rocca-Serra, Ugis Sarkans, Mohammadreza Shojatalab, and Niran Abeygunawardena
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Markup language ,computer.internet_protocol ,Biology ,Bioinformatics ,03 medical and health sciences ,Annotation ,Mice ,User-Computer Interface ,0302 clinical medicine ,Databases, Genetic ,Genetics ,Microarray databases ,Animals ,Humans ,030304 developmental biology ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,0303 health sciences ,Information retrieval ,Minimum information about a microarray experiment ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Online database ,Computational Biology ,Articles ,Accession number (bioinformatics) ,Gene expression profiling ,Europe ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,computer ,XML - Abstract
ArrayExpress is a new public database of microarray gene expression data at the EBI, which is a generic gene expression database designed to hold data from all microarray platforms. ArrayExpress uses the annotation standard Minimum Information About a Microarray Experiment (MIAME) and the associated XML data exchange format Microarray Gene Expression Markup Language (MAGE-ML) and it is designed to store well annotated data in a structured way. The ArrayExpress infrastructure consists of the database itself, data submissions in MAGE-ML format or via an online submission tool MIAMExpress, online database query interface, and the Expression Profiler online analysis tool. ArrayExpress accepts three types of submission, arrays, experiments and protocols, each of these is assigned an accession number. Help on data submission and annotation is provided by the curation team. The database can be queried on parameters such as author, laboratory, organism, experiment or array types. With an increasing number of organisations adopting MAGE-ML standard, the volume of submissions to ArrayExpress is increasing rapidly. The database can be accessed at http://www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress.
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- 2004
29. The ArrayExpress gene expression database: a software engineering and implementation perspective
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Ele Holloway, Ahmet Oezcimen, Anjan Sharma, Alvis Brazma, Ugis Sarkans, Anna Farne, Helen Parkinson, Gaurab Mukherjee, Gonzalo Garcia Lara, Tim F. Rayner, Philippe Rocca-Serra, Niran Abeygunawardena, Susanna-Assunta Sansone, Sergio Contrino, Mohammadreza Shojatalab, and Misha Kapushesky
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Statistics and Probability ,Microarray ,Computer science ,High-throughput screening ,Information Storage and Retrieval ,Biochemistry ,World Wide Web ,Software ,Gene expression ,Databases, Genetic ,Information system ,Molecular Biology ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,Microarray analysis techniques ,business.industry ,Information Dissemination ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Proteins ,Computer Science Applications ,Computational Mathematics ,Gene expression database ,Computational Theory and Mathematics ,Proteins metabolism ,Database Management Systems ,Software engineering ,business ,Algorithms - Abstract
Motivation: The lack of microarray data management systems and databases is still one of the major problems faced by many life sciences laboratories. While developing the public repository for microarray data ArrayExpress we had to find novel solutions to many non-trivial software engineering problems. Our experience will be both relevant and useful for most bioinformaticians involved in developing information systems for a wide range of high-throughput technologies. Results: ArrayExpress has been online since February 2002, growing exponentially to well over 10 000 hybridizations (as of September 2004). It has been demonstrated that our chosen design and implementation works for databases aimed at storage, access and sharing of high-throughput data. Availability: The ArrayExpress database is available at http://www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress/. The software is open source. Contact: ugis@ebi.ac.uk
- Published
- 2004
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