The Encyclopedia of DNA elements (ENCODE): data portal update

CA Davis, BC Hitz, CA Sloan, ET Chan… - Nucleic acids …, 2018 - academic.oup.com
CA Davis, BC Hitz, CA Sloan, ET Chan, JM Davidson, I Gabdank, JA Hilton, K Jain…
Nucleic acids research, 2018academic.oup.com
The Enc yclopedia of D NA E lements (ENCODE) Data Coordinating Center has developed
the ENCODE Portal database and website as the source for the data and metadata
generated by the ENCODE Consortium. Two principles have motivated the design. First,
experimental protocols, analytical procedures and the data themselves should be made
publicly accessible through a coherent, web-based search and download interface. Second,
the same interface should serve carefully curated metadata that record the provenance of …
Abstract
The Encyclopedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE) Data Coordinating Center has developed the ENCODE Portal database and website as the source for the data and metadata generated by the ENCODE Consortium. Two principles have motivated the design. First, experimental protocols, analytical procedures and the data themselves should be made publicly accessible through a coherent, web-based search and download interface. Second, the same interface should serve carefully curated metadata that record the provenance of the data and justify its interpretation in biological terms. Since its initial release in 2013 and in response to recommendations from consortium members and the wider community of scientists who use the Portal to access ENCODE data, the Portal has been regularly updated to better reflect these design principles. Here we report on these updates, including results from new experiments, uniformly-processed data from other projects, new visualization tools and more comprehensive metadata to describe experiments and analyses. Additionally, the Portal is now home to meta(data) from related projects including Genomics of Gene Regulation, Roadmap Epigenome Project, Model organism ENCODE (modENCODE) and modERN. The Portal now makes available over 13000 datasets and their accompanying metadata and can be accessed at: https://www.encodeproject.org/.
Oxford University Press