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− | We are always interested in answering questions and meeting the researchers and users that make up our community. We appreciate hearing your thoughts and all the suggestions you shared with us. For those of you who couldn't make it or didn't get a chance to stop by our booth, please feel free to share any comments or suggestions by contacting us! | + | We are always interested in answering questions and meeting the researchers and users that make up our community. We appreciate hearing your thoughts and all the suggestions you shared with us. For those of you who couldn't make it or didn't get a chance to stop by our booth, please feel free to share any comments or suggestions by [mailto:sgd-helpdesk@lists.stanford.edu contacting us]! |
If you would like to see tweets from the conference, search #Yeast18 on Twitter. | If you would like to see tweets from the conference, search #Yeast18 on Twitter. |
Revision as of 06:46, 27 September 2018
About this newsletter:
This is the September 2018 issue of the SGD newsletter. The goal of this newsletter is to inform our users about new features in SGD and to foster communication within the yeast community.
Contents
25th Anniversary of SGD
SGD is proud to celebrate our 25th anniversary! Initiating in 1993 with AceDB and later launching as a website in 1994, SGD is among the oldest biological resources on the web. The SGD website started with the basics–just check out the old CDC6 locus page! In the decades since, SGD has grown to become the premier genetics and genomics resource for S. cerevisiae.
We wish to extend a big thank you for helping us make these past decades of service to the yeast community possible. #APOYG!
SGD at Yeast Genetics Meeting 2018
From August 22-26, 2018, the SGD team was out in full force at the Yeast Genetics Meeting in Stanford, CA. Here are some of the highlights from this awesome meeting:
Mike Cherry Receives Ira Herskowitz Award
For his outstanding contributions in the field of yeast research in the last few decades, Mike Cherry, PI of SGD, received the Ira Herskowitz Award. Congratulations Mike!
Workshop: Getting More out of SGD
At our workshop, we talked about new features, cool tools, and some of the many ways you can access data at SGD to support your research. Check out the links below to download presentations given by SGD staff:
Presenter | Presentation Title |
Kevin MacPherson | [Tools & Resources] |
Patrick Ng | [Locus Summary Pages] |
Edith Wong | [Faceted Search] |
Stacia Engel | [Alliance] |
Posters
Below is a collection of posters SGD staff presented at the Yeast Genetics Meeting. Click on any of the links below to download the poster.
Presenter | Poster Title |
Rob Nash | [] |
Edith Wong | [] |
Felix Gondwe | [] |
Patrick Ng | [] |
Barbara Dunn | [] |
Kevin MacPherson | Saccharomyces Genome Database: Outreach and online training services |
Travis Sheppard | [] |
Kalpana Karra | [] |
Ajay Shrivatsav VP | [] |
Fun Stuff
A big thank you to all who stopped by our booth! Visitors received all sorts of cool informational handouts and fun prizes, such as a SuperBud yeast toy. Many were also up to the challenge of completing our Yeast Genetics Crossword puzzle… and to the victors went the spoils of an awesome 25th anniversary SGD T-shirt!
We are always interested in answering questions and meeting the researchers and users that make up our community. We appreciate hearing your thoughts and all the suggestions you shared with us. For those of you who couldn't make it or didn't get a chance to stop by our booth, please feel free to share any comments or suggestions by contacting us!
If you would like to see tweets from the conference, search #Yeast18 on Twitter.
SGD API Examples
Did you know that SGD has a collection of python scripts which demonstrate how to access data from the SGD API? The collection can be found on our GitHub here: https://github.com/yeastgenome/sgd_api_examples
Disease Data Now Available
In our effort to promote the use of yeast as a catalyst for biomedical research, SGD has recently released new our Disease Pages. Each disease page corresponds to a Disease Ontology term, such as cancer, and lists out all yeast genes that have a human homolog implicated in the disease.
Yeast genes with disease-implicated human homologs will also have a new Disease Summary tab. All associated diseases are shown, along with a network diagram that relates yeast genes, their human homologs, and the diseases associated with the human homologs.
Complex Pages Now Live
Updated Tools
You may have noticed that a lot of SGD tools and features have been getting big updates. Here are some of the latest updates you can try out and explore:
New and Improved Gene Sequence Resources
We’ve recently updated Gene/Sequence Resources to expand its search capabilities and provide more options for downloading, analyzing, and comparing sequences from different S. cerevisiae strains. New features in Gene/Sequence Resources include:
- Options to select up to 11 different yeast strains for gene searches and sequence downloading
- Ability to search for multiple genes at a time
- Sequence alignment/variation tools such as Variant Viewer
- Convenient, automatic loading of your sequence/gene of interest into other tools at SGD
Primer Design Update
Upgraded GO Term Finder
New Interaction Summaries
Research Spotlight (Blog posts)
In case you missed them, here are some of the most popular Research Spotlights posted on our blog lately:
- Mixing Mitochondria Makes Magic Wolters and coworkers show that many yeast cells recombine mitochondrial DNA after mating, for better or for worse.
- Too Much of a Good Thing Can Be Hazardous to Your Health Chakraborty and colleagues reveal that making too much of DNA mismatch repair proteins can be disastrous for your DNA and your health.
- (Almost) All Hands on Deck for Calcineurin Connolly and colleagues uncover the roles of the four mysterious "arms" of the yeast calcineurin protein, Cnb1p.
- Chaperone Wars: The Last Co-chaperone Reidy and coworkers show that Sti1p helps save the galaxy by helping a protein chaperone perform its function and interact with other proteins.
What else have we been up to lately?
You may have seen SGD representatives at the following meetings:
- Senior Biocuration Scientist Rob Nash presented a tutorial at the Yeast Genetics and Genomics course at CSHL in late July. He demonstrated the use of YeastMine and how to navigate through SGD's website.
- Biocuration Scientist Kevin MacPherson gave tutorials at the Fungal Pathogen Genomics course at the Wellcome Genome Campus in May. He taught students how to use tools and resources at both SGD and the Candida Genome Database.
20th Anniversary of the Gene Ontology
Upcoming Meetings
International Specialized Symposium on Yeasts, "Yeast Odyssey: from nature to industry"
Bariloche, Patagonia, Argentina
October 1 - 4, 2018
International Workshop on Brewing Yeasts
Bariloche, Patagonia, Argentina
October 5 - 6, 2018
EMBO Workshop on Experimental Approaches to Evolution and Ecology Using Yeast and Other Model Systems
Heidelberg, Germany
October 17 - 20, 2018
30th Fungal Genetics Conference
Asilomar Conference Grounds, Pacific Grove, CA, USA
March 12 - 17, 2019