Ensembl 2016.
Andrew YatesWasiu A AkanniM Ridwan AmodeDaniel BarrellKonstantinos BillisDenise Carvalho-SilvaCarla CumminsPeter ClaphamStephen FitzgeraldLaurent GilCarlos García GirónLeo GordonThibaut HourlierSarah E HuntSophie H JanacekNathan JohnsonThomas JuettemannStephen KeenanIlias LavidasFergal J MartinThomas MaurelWilliam McLarenDaniel N MurphyRishi NagMichael NuhnAnne ParkerMateus PatricioMiguel PignatelliMatthew RahtzHarpreet Singh RiatDaniel SheppardKieron TaylorAnja ThormannAlessandro VulloSteven P WilderAmonida ZadissaEwan BirneyJennifer HarrowMatthieu MuffatoEmily PerryMagali RuffierGiulietta SpudichStephen J TrevanionFiona CunninghamBronwen L AkenDaniel R ZerbinoPaul FlicekPublished in: Nucleic acids research (2015)
The Ensembl project (http://www.ensembl.org) is a system for genome annotation, analysis, storage and dissemination designed to facilitate the access of genomic annotation from chordates and key model organisms. It provides access to data from 87 species across our main and early access Pre! websites. This year we introduced three newly annotated species and released numerous updates across our supported species with a concentration on data for the latest genome assemblies of human, mouse, zebrafish and rat. We also provided two data updates for the previous human assembly, GRCh37, through a dedicated website (http://grch37.ensembl.org). Our tools, in particular the VEP, have been improved significantly through integration of additional third party data. REST is now capable of larger-scale analysis and our regulatory data BioMart can deliver faster results. The website is now capable of displaying long-range interactions such as those found in cis-regulated datasets. Finally we have launched a website optimized for mobile devices providing views of genes, variants and phenotypes. Our data is made available without restriction and all code is available from our GitHub organization site (http://github.com/Ensembl) under an Apache 2.0 license.