Back to Search Start Over

Crowdsourced analysis of ash and ash dieback through the Open Ash Dieback project: A year 1 report on datasets and analyses contributed by a self-organising community

Authors :
Daniel C. E. Bunting
Steve Collin
Ghanasyam Rallapalli
Bernardo J. Clavijo
Anne Edwards
Diane G. O. Saunders
Dan MacLean
Sophien Kamoun
Christine Sambles
Kentaro Yoshida
Graham J Etherington
David Swarbreck
Hosoya T
Clark
Liliana M. Cano
R. Glover
David J. Studholme
Downie Ja
Matthew Bashton
Sarah Ayling
Dong S
Mario Caccamo
Manuel Corpas
Lisa Crossman
Joe Win
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2014.

Abstract

Ash dieback is a fungal disease of ash trees caused by Hymenoscyphus pseudoalbidus that has swept across Europe in the last two decades and is a significant threat to the ash population. This emergent pathogen has been relatively poorly studied and little is known about its genetic make-up. In response to the arrival of this dangerous pathogen in the UK we took the unusual step of providing an open access database and initial sequence datasets to the scientific community for analysis prior to performing an analysis of our own. Our goal was to crowdsource genomic and other analyses and create a community analysing this pathogen. In this report on the evolution of the community and data and analysis obtained in the first year of this activity, we describe the nature and the volume of the contributions and reveal some preliminary insights into the genome and biology of H. pseudoalbidus that emerged. In particular our nascent community generated a first-pass genome assembly containing abundant collapsed AT-rich repeats indicating a typically complex genome structure. Our open science and crowdsourcing effort has brought a wealth of new knowledge about this emergent pathogen within a short time-frame. Our community endeavour highlights the positive impact that open, collaborative approaches can have on fast, responsive modern science.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4e7fa042c4f0ae05f5a99ba42b66e8ef
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/004564