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The UCSC Genome Browser database: 2017 update.

Cath TynerGalt P BarberJonathan CasperHiram ClawsonMark DiekhansChristopher EisenhartClayton M FischerDavid GibsonJairo Navarro GonzalezLuvina GuruvadooMaximilian HaeusslerSteve HeitnerAngie S HinrichsDonna KarolchikLaurence D RoweParisa NejadBrian J RaneyKate R RosenbloomMatthew L SpeirChris VillarrealJohn VivianAnn S ZweigDavid HausslerRobert M KuhnW James Kent
Published in: Nucleic acids research (2016)
Since its 2001 debut, the University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC) Genome Browser (http://genome.ucsc.edu/) team has provided continuous support to the international genomics and biomedical communities through a web-based, open source platform designed for the fast, scalable display of sequence alignments and annotations landscaped against a vast collection of quality reference genome assemblies. The browser's publicly accessible databases are the backbone of a rich, integrated bioinformatics tool suite that includes a graphical interface for data queries and downloads, alignment programs, command-line utilities and more. This year's highlights include newly designed home and gateway pages; a new 'multi-region' track display configuration for exon-only, gene-only and custom regions visualization; new genome browsers for three species (brown kiwi, crab-eating macaque and Malayan flying lemur); eight updated genome assemblies; extended support for new data types such as CRAM, RNA-seq expression data and long-range chromatin interaction pairs; and the unveiling of a new supported mirror site in Japan.
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