Ensembl genome database project.
Content
DescriptionEnsembl
Contact
Research center
Primary citationYates, et al. (2020)[1]
Access
Websitewww.ensembl.org

Ensembl genome database project is a scientific project at the European Bioinformatics Institute, which provides a centralized resource for geneticists, molecular biologists and other researchers studying the genomes of our own species and other vertebrates and model organisms.[2][3][4] Ensembl is one of several well known genome browsers for the retrieval of genomic information.

Similar databases and browsers are found at NCBI and the University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC).

History

The human genome consists of three billion base pairs, which code for approximately 20,000–25,000 genes. However the genome alone is of little use, unless the locations and relationships of individual genes can be identified. One option is manual annotation, whereby a team of scientists tries to locate genes using experimental data from scientific journals and public databases. However this is a slow, painstaking task. The alternative, known as automated annotation, is to use the power of computers to do the complex pattern-matching of protein to DNA.[5][6] The Ensembl project was launched in 1999 in response to the imminent completion of the Human Genome Project, with the initial goals of automatically annotate the human genome, integrate this annotation with available biological data and make all this knowledge publicly available.[2]

In the Ensembl project, sequence data are fed into the gene annotation system (a collection of software "pipelines" written in Perl) which creates a set of predicted gene locations and saves them in a MySQL database for subsequent analysis and display. Ensembl makes these data freely accessible to the world research community. All the data and code produced by the Ensembl project is available to download,[7] and there is also a publicly accessible database server allowing remote access. In addition, the Ensembl website provides computer-generated visual displays of much of the data.

Over time the project has expanded to include additional species (including key model organisms such as mouse, fruitfly and zebrafish) as well as a wider range of genomic data, including genetic variations and regulatory features. Since April 2009, a sister project, Ensembl Genomes, has extended the scope of Ensembl into invertebrate metazoa, plants, fungi, bacteria, and protists, focusing on providing taxonomic and evolutionary context to genes, whilst the original project continues to focus on vertebrates.[8][9]

As of 2020, Ensembl supported over 50 000 genomes across both Ensembl and Ensembl Genomes databases, adding some new innovative features such as Rapid Release, a new website designed to make genome annotation data available more quickly to users, and COVID-19, a new website to access to SARS-CoV-2 reference genome.

Displaying genomic data

Gene SGCB aligned to the human genome

Central to the Ensembl concept is the ability to automatically generate graphical views of the alignment of genes and other genomic data against a reference genome. These are shown as data tracks, and individual tracks can be turned on and off, allowing the user to customise the display to suit their research interests. The interface also enables the user to zoom in to a region or move along the genome in either direction.

Other displays show data at varying levels of resolution, from whole karyotypes down to text-based representations of DNA and amino acid sequences, or present other types of display such as trees of similar genes (homologues) across a range of species. The graphics are complemented by tabular displays, and in many cases data can be exported directly from the page in a variety of standard file formats such as FASTA.

Externally produced data can also be added to the display by uploading a suitable file in one of the supported formats, such as BAM, BED, or PSL.

Graphics are generated using a suite of custom Perl modules based on GD, the standard Perl graphics display library.

Alternative access methods

In addition to its website, Ensembl provides a REST API and a Perl API[10] (Application Programming Interface) that models biological objects such as genes and proteins, allowing simple scripts to be written to retrieve data of interest. The same API is used internally by the web interface to display the data. It is divided in sections like the core API, the compara API (for comparative genomics data), the variation API (for accessing SNPs, SNVs, CNVs..), and the functional genomics API (to access regulatory data). The Ensembl website provides extensive information on how to install and use the API.

This software can be used to access the public MySQL database, avoiding the need to download enormous datasets. The users could even choose to retrieve data from the MySQL with direct SQL queries, but this requires an extensive knowledge of the current database schema.

Large datasets can be retrieved using the BioMart data-mining tool. It provides a web interface for downloading datasets using complex queries.

Last, there is an FTP server which can be used to download entire MySQL databases as well some selected data sets in other formats.

Current species

The annotated genomes include most fully sequenced vertebrates and selected model organisms. All of them are eukaryotes, there are no prokaryotes. As of 2022, there are 271 species registered, this includes:[11]

Species
Chordata Mammalia Euarchontoglires Primates Angola colobus, black-capped squirrel monkey, black snub-nosed monkey, bonobo, bushbaby, capuchin, chimpanzee, common marmoset, Coquerel's sifaka, crab-eating macaque, drill, human, macaque, mouse lemur, gelada, gibbon, golden snub-nosed monkey, gorilla, greater bamboo lemur, green monkey, Ma's night monkey, olive baboon, orangutan, pig-tailed macaque, sooty mangabey, tarsier, Ugandan red colobus
Scandentia tree shrew
Glires (Rodents + Lagomorphs) Algerian mouse, alpine marmot, american beaver, arctic ground squirrel, Brazilian guineapig, chinese hamster, damaraland mole rat, daurian ground squirrel, degu, eurasian red squirrel, golden hamster, ground squirrel, guineapig, kangaroo rat, lesser Egyptian jerboa, long-tailed chinchilla, mongolian gerbil, mouse, naked mole-rat, North American deermouse, rat, pika, prairie vole, rabbit, Ryukyu mouse, shrew mouse, steppe mouse, thirteen-lined ground squirrel, Upper Galilee mountains blind mole rat
Laurasiatheria Alpaca, american bison, american black bear, american mink, Arabian camel, asian black bear, beluga whale, blue whale, chacoan peccary, California sea lion, Canada lynx, cat, cow, dingo, dog, dolphin, domestic yak, donkey, goat, ferret, giant panda, greater horseshoe bat, hedgehog, horse, leopard, lesser hedgehog tenrec, lion, meerkat, megabat, microbat, narwhal, polar bear, pig, red fox, sheep, shrew, Siberian musk deer, sperm whale, Siberian tiger, vaquita, wild yak, yarkand deer
Afrotheria Elephant, hyrax, tenrec
Xenarthra Armadillo, sloth
Marsupialia Common wombat, koala, opossum, Tasmanian devil, wallaby
Monotremes Platypus
Reptilia Argentine black and white tegu, blue-ringed sea krait, central bearded dragon, chinese softshell turtle, common snapping turtle, common wall lizard, desert tortoise, eastern brown snake, saltwater crocodile, Goode's thornscrub tortoise, green anole, indian cobra, komodo dragon, mainland tiger snake, painted turtle, Pinta Island tortoise, three-toed box turtle, tuatara, West African mud turtle
Birds African ostrich, bengalese finch, blue-crowned manakin, blue tit, budgerigar, burrowing owl, chicken, chicken (Red junglefowl), chicken (maternal Broiler), chicken (paternal White leghorn layer), chilean tinamou, colared flycatcher, common canary, common kestrel, dark-eyed junco, duck, eastern buzzard, eastern spot-billed duck, emu, eurasian eagle-owl, eurasian sparrowhawk, golden eagle, golden pheasant, golden-collared manakin, gouldian finch, great tit, great spotted kiwi, helmeted guineafowl, indian peafowl, japanese quail, kakapo, little spotted kiwi, mallard, medium ground finch, muscovy duck, New Caledonian crow, northern spotted owl, okarito brown kiwi, oriental scops owl, pink-footed goose, ring-necked pheasant, ruff, rufous-capped babbler, silver-eye, small tree finch, spoon-billed sandpiper, superb fairywren, Swainson's thrush, swan goose, turkey, white-throated sparrow, yellow-billed amazon, zebu, zebra finch
Lissamphibia Leisan spiny toad, Xenopus tropicalis
Teleosts Amazon molly, asian arowana, atlantic cod, atlantic herring, atlantic salmon, ballan wrasse, barramundi perch, bicolor damselfish, blind barbel, blue tilapia, blunt-snouted clingfish, brown trout, Burton's mouthbrooder, channel bull blenny, channel catfish, chinese rmedaka, chinook salmon, climbing perch, clown anemonefish, coelacanth, coho salmon, common carp, denticle herring, eastern happy, electric eel, elephant shark, european bass, gilthead bream, golden-line barbel, goldfish, greater amberjack, guppy, hagfish, horned golden-line barbel, huchen, indian glassy fish, indian medaka, japanese medaka, javanese ricefish, jewelled blenny, large yellow croaker, live sharksucker, lumpfish, lyretail cichlid, Makobe island chichlid, mangrove rivulus, mexican tetra, Midas chichlid, Monterrey platyfish, mummichog, Nile tilapia, northern pike, ocean sunfish, orange clownfish, orbiculate cardinalfish, Paramormyrops kingsleyae, Periophthalmus magnuspinnatus, pike-perch, pinecone soldierfish, platyfish, rainbow trout, red-bellied piranha, reedfish, round goby, sailfin molly, sheepshead minnow, shortfin molly, Siamese fighting fish, spinny chromis, spotted gar, swamp eel, tetraodon, three-spined stickleback, tiger tail seahorse, tongue sole, turbot, turquoise killfish, western mosquitofish, yellowtail amberjack, Takifugu rubripes (fugu), zebrafish, zebra mbuna, zigzag eel
Cyclostomata Petromyzon marinus (sea lamprey)
Tunicates Ciona intestinalis, Ciona savignyi
Invertebrates Insects Drosophila melanogaster (fruitfly), Anopheles gambiae (mosquito), Aedes aegypti (mosquito)
Worms Caenorhabditis elegans
Yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae (baker's yeast)

Open source/mirrors

All data part of the Ensembl project is open access and all software is open source, being freely available to the scientific community, under a CC BY 4.0 license. Currently, Ensembl database website is mirrored at four different locations worldwide to improve the service.

Official mirror sites
UK (Sanger Institute) ---- main website
US West (Amazon AWS) ---- Cloud-based mirror on West Coast of United States
US East (Amazon AWS) ---- Cloud-based mirror on East Coast of United States
Asia (Amazon AWS) ---- Cloud-based mirror in Singapore

See also

References

  1. Yates A. D.; et al. (January 2020). "Ensembl 2020". Nucleic Acids Res. 48 (D1): D682–D688. doi:10.1093/nar/gkz966. PMC 7145704. PMID 31691826.
  2. 1 2 Hubbard, T. (1 January 2002). "The Ensembl genome database project". Nucleic Acids Research. 30 (1): 38–41. doi:10.1093/nar/30.1.38. PMC 99161. PMID 11752248.
  3. Flicek P, Amode MR, Barrell D, et al. (November 2010). "Ensembl 2011". Nucleic Acids Res. 39 (Database issue): D800–D806. doi:10.1093/nar/gkq1064. PMC 3013672. PMID 21045057.
  4. Flicek P, Aken BL, Ballester B, et al. (January 2010). "Ensembl's 10th year". Nucleic Acids Res. 38 (Database issue): D557–62. doi:10.1093/nar/gkp972. PMC 2808936. PMID 19906699.
  5. Davis, Charles Patrick (29 March 2021). "Medical definition of Genome Annotation". Archived from the original on 14 June 2021. Retrieved 7 August 2022.
  6. Curwen, Val; Eyras, Eduardo; Andrews, T. Daniel; Clarke, Laura; Mongin, Emmanuel; Searle, Steven M. J.; Clamp, Michele (May 2004). "The Ensembl automatic gene annotation system". Genome Research. 14 (5): 942–950. doi:10.1101/gr.1858004. ISSN 1088-9051. PMC 479124. PMID 15123590.
  7. Ruffier, Magali; Kähäri, Andreas; Komorowska, Monika; Keenan, Stephen; Laird, Matthew; Longden, Ian; Proctor, Glenn; Searle, Steve; Staines, Daniel; Taylor, Kieron; Vullo, Alessandro; Yates, Andrew; Zerbino, Daniel; Flicek, Paul (January 2017). "Ensembl core software resources: storage and programmatic access for DNA sequence and genome annotation". Database. 2017 (1): bax020. doi:10.1093/database/bax020. PMC 5467575. PMID 28365736.
  8. Hubbard, T. J. P.; Aken, B. L.; Ayling, S.; Ballester, B.; Beal, K.; Bragin, E.; Brent, S.; Chen, Y.; Clapham, P.; Clarke, L.; Coates, G. (January 2009). "Ensembl 2009". Nucleic Acids Research. 37 (Database issue): D690–697. doi:10.1093/nar/gkn828. ISSN 1362-4962. PMC 2686571. PMID 19033362.
  9. Howe, Kevin L.; Contreras-Moreira, Bruno; De Silva, Nishadi; Maslen, Gareth; Akanni, Wasiu; Allen, James; Alvarez-Jarreta, Jorge; Barba, Matthieu; Bolser, Dan M.; Cambell, Lahcen; Carbajo, Manuel (8 January 2020). "Ensembl Genomes 2020-enabling non-vertebrate genomic research". Nucleic Acids Research. 48 (D1): D689–D695. doi:10.1093/nar/gkz890. ISSN 1362-4962. PMC 6943047. PMID 31598706.
  10. Stabenau A, McVicker G, Melsopp C, Proctor G, Clamp M, Birney E (February 2004). "The Ensembl Core Software Libraries". Genome Research. 14 (5): 929–933. doi:10.1101/gr.1857204. PMC 479122. PMID 15123588.
  11. "Species List". uswest.ensembl.org. Retrieved 5 August 2022.
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