1. Ensembl 2024.
- Author
-
Harrison PW, Amode MR, Austine-Orimoloye O, Azov AG, Barba M, Barnes I, Becker A, Bennett R, Berry A, Bhai J, Bhurji SK, Boddu S, Branco Lins PR, Brooks L, Ramaraju SB, Campbell LI, Martinez MC, Charkhchi M, Chougule K, Cockburn A, Davidson C, De Silva NH, Dodiya K, Donaldson S, El Houdaigui B, Naboulsi TE, Fatima R, Giron CG, Genez T, Grigoriadis D, Ghattaoraya GS, Martinez JG, Gurbich TA, Hardy M, Hollis Z, Hourlier T, Hunt T, Kay M, Kaykala V, Le T, Lemos D, Lodha D, Marques-Coelho D, Maslen G, Merino GA, Mirabueno LP, Mushtaq A, Hossain SN, Ogeh DN, Sakthivel MP, Parker A, Perry M, Piližota I, Poppleton D, Prosovetskaia I, Raj S, Pérez-Silva JG, Salam AIA, Saraf S, Saraiva-Agostinho N, Sheppard D, Sinha S, Sipos B, Sitnik V, Stark W, Steed E, Suner MM, Surapaneni L, Sutinen K, Tricomi FF, Urbina-Gómez D, Veidenberg A, Walsh TA, Ware D, Wass E, Willhoft NL, Allen J, Alvarez-Jarreta J, Chakiachvili M, Flint B, Giorgetti S, Haggerty L, Ilsley GR, Keatley J, Loveland JE, Moore B, Mudge JM, Naamati G, Tate J, Trevanion SJ, Winterbottom A, Frankish A, Hunt SE, Cunningham F, Dyer S, Finn RD, Martin FJ, and Yates AD
- Subjects
- Animals, Genome, Molecular Sequence Annotation, Phylogeny, Software, Humans, Databases, Genetic, Genomics
- Abstract
Ensembl (https://www.ensembl.org) is a freely available genomic resource that has produced high-quality annotations, tools, and services for vertebrates and model organisms for more than two decades. In recent years, there has been a dramatic shift in the genomic landscape, with a large increase in the number and phylogenetic breadth of high-quality reference genomes, alongside major advances in the pan-genome representations of higher species. In order to support these efforts and accelerate downstream research, Ensembl continues to focus on scaling for the rapid annotation of new genome assemblies, developing new methods for comparative analysis, and expanding the depth and quality of our genome annotations. This year we have continued our expansion to support global biodiversity research, doubling the number of annotated genomes we support on our Rapid Release site to over 1700, driven by our close collaboration with biodiversity projects such as Darwin Tree of Life. We have also strengthened support for key agricultural species, including the first regulatory builds for farmed animals, and have updated key tools and resources that support the global scientific community, notably the Ensembl Variant Effect Predictor. Ensembl data, software, and tools are freely available., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF