Database Commons
Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

General information

URL: https://www.ebi.ac.uk/gxa
Full name: Expression Atlas
Description: The Expression Atlas provides information on gene expression patterns under different biological conditions such as a gene knock out, a plant treated with a compound, or in a particular organism part or cell. It includes both microarray and RNA-seq data. The data is re-analysed in-house to detect interesting expression patterns under the conditions of the original experiment.
Year founded: 2010
Last update: 2022
Version: v1.0
Accessibility:
Manual:
Accessible
Real time : Checking...
Country/Region: United Kingdom

Classification & Tag

Data type:
RNA
Data object:
Database category:
Major species:
Keywords:

Contact information

University/Institution: European Bioinformatics Institute
Address: European Molecular Biology Laboratory,European Bioinformatics Institute,EMBL-EBI,Hinxton,CB10 1SD,UK
City: Cambridge
Province/State: Cambridgeshire
Country/Region: United Kingdom
Contact name (PI/Team): Robert Petryszak
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): rpetry@ebi.ac.uk

Publications

34850121
Expression Atlas update: gene and protein expression in multiple species. [PMID: 34850121]
Moreno P, Fexova S, George N, Manning JR, Miao Z, Mohammed S, Muñoz-Pomer A, Fullgrabe A, Bi Y, Bush N, Iqbal H, Kumbham U, Solovyev A, Zhao L, Prakash A, García-Seisdedos D, Kundu DJ, Wang S, Walzer M, Clarke L, Osumi-Sutherland D, Tello-Ruiz MK, Kumari S, Ware D, Eliasova J, Arends MJ, Nawijn MC, Meyer K, Burdett T, Marioni J, Teichmann S, Vizcaíno JA, Brazma A, Papatheodorou I.

The EMBL-EBI Expression Atlas is an added value knowledge base that enables researchers to answer the question of where (tissue, organism part, developmental stage, cell type) and under which conditions (disease, treatment, gender, etc) a gene or protein of interest is expressed. Expression Atlas brings together data from >4500 expression studies from >65 different species, across different conditions and tissues. It makes these data freely available in an easy to visualise form, after expert curation to accurately represent the intended experimental design, re-analysed via standardised pipelines that rely on open-source community developed tools. Each study's metadata are annotated using ontologies. The data are re-analyzed with the aim of reproducing the original conclusions of the underlying experiments. Expression Atlas is currently divided into Bulk Expression Atlas and Single Cell Expression Atlas. Expression Atlas contains data from differential studies (microarray and bulk RNA-Seq) and baseline studies (bulk RNA-Seq and proteomics), whereas Single Cell Expression Atlas is currently dedicated to Single Cell RNA-Sequencing (scRNA-Seq) studies. The resource has been in continuous development since 2009 and it is available at https://www.ebi.ac.uk/gxa.

Nucleic Acids Res. 2022:50(D1) | 48 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2024-04-20)
33782609
User-friendly, scalable tools and workflows for single-cell RNA-seq analysis. [PMID: 33782609]
Moreno P, Huang N, Manning JR, Mohammed S, Solovyev A, Polanski K, Bacon W, Chazarra R, Talavera-López C, Doyle MA, Marnier G, Grüning B, Rasche H, George N, Fexova SK, Alibi M, Miao Z, Perez-Riverol Y, Haeussler M, Brazma A, Teichmann S, Meyer KB, Papatheodorou I.
Nat Methods. 2021:18(4) | 17 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2024-04-20)
29165655
Expression Atlas: gene and protein expression across multiple studies and organisms. [PMID: 29165655]
Papatheodorou I, Fonseca NA, Keays M, Tang YA, Barrera E, Bazant W, Burke M, Füllgrabe A, Fuentes AM, George N, Huerta L, Koskinen S, Mohammed S, Geniza M, Preece J, Jaiswal P, Jarnuczak AF, Huber W, Stegle O, Vizcaino JA, Brazma A, Petryszak R.

Expression Atlas (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/gxa) is an added value database that provides information about gene and protein expression in different species and contexts, such as tissue, developmental stage, disease or cell type. The available public and controlled access data sets from different sources are curated and re-analysed using standardized, open source pipelines and made available for queries, download and visualization. As of August 2017, Expression Atlas holds data from 3,126 studies across 33 different species, including 731 from plants. Data from large-scale RNA sequencing studies including Blueprint, PCAWG, ENCODE, GTEx and HipSci can be visualized next to each other. In Expression Atlas, users can query genes or gene-sets of interest and explore their expression across or within species, tissues, developmental stages in a constitutive or differential context, representing the effects of diseases, conditions or experimental interventions. All processed data matrices are available for direct download in tab-delimited format or as R-data. In addition to the web interface, data sets can now be searched and downloaded through the Expression Atlas R package. Novel features and visualizations include the on-the-fly analysis of gene set overlaps and the option to view gene co-expression in experiments investigating constitutive gene expression across tissues or other conditions.

Nucleic Acids Res. 2018:46(D1) | 207 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2024-04-20)
28369191
The RNASeq-er API-a gateway to systematically updated analysis of public RNA-seq data. [PMID: 28369191]
Petryszak R, Fonseca NA, Füllgrabe A, Huerta L, Keays M, Tang YA, Brazma A.

The exponential growth of publicly available RNA-sequencing (RNA-Seq) data poses an increasing challenge to researchers wishing to discover, analyse and store such data, particularly those based in institutions with limited computational resources. EMBL-EBI is in an ideal position to address these challenges and to allow the scientific community easy access to not just raw, but also processed RNA-Seq data. We present a Web service to access the results of a systematically and continually updated standardized alignment as well as gene and exon expression quantification of all public bulk (and in the near future also single-cell) RNA-Seq runs in 264 species in European Nucleotide Archive, using Representational State Transfer.The RNASeq-er API (Application Programming Interface) enables ontology-powered search for and retrieval of CRAM, bigwig and bedGraph files, gene and exon expression quantification matrices (Fragments Per Kilobase Of Exon Per Million Fragments Mapped, Transcripts Per Million, raw counts) as well as sample attributes annotated with ontology terms. To date over 270 00 RNA-Seq runs in nearly 10 000 studies (1PB of raw FASTQ data) in 264 species in ENA have been processed and made available via the API.The RNASeq-er API can be accessed at http://www.ebi.ac.uk/fg/rnaseq/api . The commands used to analyse the data are available in supplementary materials and at https://github.com/nunofonseca/irap/wiki/iRAP-single-library .rnaseq@ebi.ac.uk ; rpetry@ebi.ac.uk.Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.

Bioinformatics. 2017:33(14) | 19 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2024-04-20)
26481351
Expression Atlas update--an integrated database of gene and protein expression in humans, animals and plants. [PMID: 26481351]
Petryszak R, Keays M, Tang YA, Fonseca NA, Barrera E, Burdett T, Füllgrabe A, Fuentes AM, Jupp S, Koskinen S, Mannion O, Huerta L, Megy K, Snow C, Williams E, Barzine M, Hastings E, Weisser H, Wright J, Jaiswal P, Huber W, Choudhary J, Parkinson HE, Brazma A.

Expression Atlas (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/gxa) provides information about gene and protein expression in animal and plant samples of different cell types, organism parts, developmental stages, diseases and other conditions. It consists of selected microarray and RNA-sequencing studies from ArrayExpress, which have been manually curated, annotated with ontology terms, checked for high quality and processed using standardised analysis methods. Since the last update, Atlas has grown seven-fold (1572 studies as of August 2015), and incorporates baseline expression profiles of tissues from Human Protein Atlas, GTEx and FANTOM5, and of cancer cell lines from ENCODE, CCLE and Genentech projects. Plant studies constitute a quarter of Atlas data. For genes of interest, the user can view baseline expression in tissues, and differential expression for biologically meaningful pairwise comparisons-estimated using consistent methodology across all of Atlas. Our first proteomics study in human tissues is now displayed alongside transcriptomics data in the same tissues. Novel analyses and visualisations include: 'enrichment' in each differential comparison of GO terms, Reactome, Plant Reactome pathways and InterPro domains; hierarchical clustering (by baseline expression) of most variable genes and experimental conditions; and, for a given gene-condition, distribution of baseline expression across biological replicates. © The Author(s) 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.

Nucleic Acids Res. 2016:44(D1) | 317 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2024-04-20)
24304889
Expression Atlas update--a database of gene and transcript expression from microarray- and sequencing-based functional genomics experiments. [PMID: 24304889]
Petryszak R, Burdett T, Fiorelli B, Fonseca NA, Gonzalez-Porta M, Hastings E, Huber W, Jupp S, Keays M, Kryvych N, McMurry J, Marioni JC, Malone J, Megy K, Rustici G, Tang AY, Taubert J, Williams E, Mannion O, Parkinson HE, Brazma A.

Expression Atlas (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/gxa) is a value-added database providing information about gene, protein and splice variant expression in different cell types, organism parts, developmental stages, diseases and other biological and experimental conditions. The database consists of selected high-quality microarray and RNA-sequencing experiments from ArrayExpress that have been manually curated, annotated with Experimental Factor Ontology terms and processed using standardized microarray and RNA-sequencing analysis methods. The new version of Expression Atlas introduces the concept of 'baseline' expression, i.e. gene and splice variant abundance levels in healthy or untreated conditions, such as tissues or cell types. Differential gene expression data benefit from an in-depth curation of experimental intent, resulting in biologically meaningful 'contrasts', i.e. instances of differential pairwise comparisons between two sets of biological replicates. Other novel aspects of Expression Atlas are its strict quality control of raw experimental data, up-to-date RNA-sequencing analysis methods, expression data at the level of gene sets, as well as genes and a more powerful search interface designed to maximize the biological value provided to the user.

Nucleic Acids Res. 2014:42(Database issue) | 208 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2024-04-20)
22064864
Gene Expression Atlas update--a value-added database of microarray and sequencing-based functional genomics experiments. [PMID: 22064864]
Kapushesky M, Adamusiak T, Burdett T, Culhane A, Farne A, Filippov A, Holloway E, Klebanov A, Kryvych N, Kurbatova N, Kurnosov P, Malone J, Melnichuk O, Petryszak R, Pultsin N, Rustici G, Tikhonov A, Travillian RS, Williams E, Zorin A, Parkinson H, Brazma A.

Gene Expression Atlas (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/gxa) is an added-value database providing information about gene expression in different cell types, organism parts, developmental stages, disease states, sample treatments and other biological/experimental conditions. The content of this database derives from curation, re-annotation and statistical analysis of selected data from the ArrayExpress Archive and the European Nucleotide Archive. A simple interface allows the user to query for differential gene expression either by gene names or attributes or by biological conditions, e.g. diseases, organism parts or cell types. Since our previous report we made 20 monthly releases and, as of Release 11.08 (August 2011), the database supports 19 species, which contains expression data measured for 19,014 biological conditions in 136,551 assays from 5598 independent studies.

Nucleic Acids Res. 2012:40(Database issue) | 108 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2024-04-20)
19906730
Gene expression atlas at the European bioinformatics institute. [PMID: 19906730]
Kapushesky M, Emam I, Holloway E, Kurnosov P, Zorin A, Malone J, Rustici G, Williams E, Parkinson H, Brazma A.

The Gene Expression Atlas (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/gxa) is an added-value database providing information about gene expression in different cell types, organism parts, developmental stages, disease states, sample treatments and other biological/experimental conditions. The content of this database derives from curation, re-annotation and statistical analysis of selected data from the ArrayExpress Archive of Functional Genomics Data. A simple interface allows the user to query for differential gene expression either (i) by gene names or attributes such as Gene Ontology terms, or (ii) by biological conditions, e.g. diseases, organism parts or cell types. The gene queries return the conditions where expression has been reported, while condition queries return which genes are reported to be expressed in these conditions. A combination of both query types is possible. The query results are ranked using various statistical measures and by how many independent studies in the database show the particular gene-condition association. Currently, the database contains information about more than 200,000 genes from nine species and almost 4500 biological conditions studied in over 30,000 assays from over 1000 independent studies.

Nucleic Acids Res. 2010:38(Database issue) | 139 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2024-04-20)

Ranking

All databases:
162/6000 (97.317%)
Expression:
26/1143 (97.813%)
162
Total Rank
1,048
Citations
74.857
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Record metadata

Created on: 2015-06-20
Curated by:
Xinyu Zhou [2023-10-09]
Xinyu Zhou [2023-10-07]
Yuxin Qin [2023-09-19]
Lina Ma [2022-04-26]
Lina Ma [2019-04-16]
Yang Zhang [2018-01-27]
Mengwei Li [2016-02-21]
Lin Liu [2016-02-02]
Lin Liu [2016-01-17]
Zhang Zhang [2015-12-31]
Jian Sang [2015-06-28]
Jian Sang [2015-06-27]