Hi Andy,

thanks for the info. Having a bed DAS adaptor is part of the problem,
the other is not having to worry about having to deal with the DAS
server directly. easyDAS manages to do this but unfortunately it is
not obvious for people who do not know DAS how to operate it. Also if
the file is very big and the connection slow it can take up to an hour
to create a DAS source.

Wouldn't it be nice to create a DAS source just with one click or two?

Please see below a snippet of a few SNPs in my chromosome 16 just as
you would get them from 23andMe (NCBI36 assembly; columns mean
SNP_id/chr/position/genotype).

Cheers,
Manuel

rs7763  16      544555  TT
rs763158        16      546105  GG
rs7190878       16      549131  AG
rs4984890       16      552699  CT
rs710925        16      573355  AG
rs2017567       16      577213  CT
rs4144003       16      585969  CT
rs7190358       16      590789  AG
rs7203694       16      592942  AG
rs11248940      16      595687  TT
rs7204088       16      601143  TT
rs4984677       16      611683  AG
rs9929621       16      619413  CT
rs11642546      16      641657  CC
rs3752496       16      650256  TT
rs2301426       16      651906  GG
rs1044662       16      655061  CC
rs9934288       16      656288  AC
rs3752493       16      657524  TT
rs1139897       16      660987  GG
rs1045763       16      664085  CC
rs3830140       16      665336  AA
rs8056588       16      666190  CC
rs6597  16      671726  TT


Manuel Corpas, PhD
Tel:      +44.122349.2372
Web:    http://manuelcorpas.com/about/
Twitter: @manuelcorpas



On 18 November 2011 15:14, Andy Jenkinson <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Manuel,
>
> Since 2008 ProServer has had a BED format SourceAdaptor (called bed12, as it 
> is intended to work with the 12-field BED format). It also supports Hydras, 
> which are modules that are designed to automatically create DAS sources from 
> a single config without restarting the server. This is how EasyDAS works with 
> ProServer: there is one SourceAdaptor, and a Hydra to scan a relational 
> database for new data.
>
> I don't know what 23andme's data looks like, but the addition of a Hydra to 
> scan directories for new files and automatically make them available as DAS 
> sources would seem to be a trivial piece of work. I daresay a VCF adaptor 
> would also be fairly easy, especially if there is a Perl API of some sort 
> (BioPerl?).
>
> Cheers,
> Andy
>
> On 17 Nov 2011, at 17:11, Manuel Corpas wrote:
>
>> Dear Jonathan,
>>
>> I hope you do not mind me copying the DAS list in this email, as we
>> would be very keen to gather interest in the community regarding DAS
>> applications to whole genomes.
>>
>> We are interested in exploring DAS in the context of genomic variants
>> (SNPs, indels, CNVs) from personal genomes plus their integration with
>> relevant sources (genes, variation data, phenotypes).
>>
>> Currently we have done a lot of work with 23andMe (whole-genome)
>> genotypes but now we are expecting to extend our efforts further to
>> exome data. A critical tool we are currently missing is one that
>> allows automatic creation of DAS sources via an API directly from bed
>> format (used by 23andMe) or vcf (1000genomes).
>>
>> Anyone interested in discussing these topics please let me know.
>>
>> Kind regards,
>> Manuel
>>
>> Manuel Corpas, PhD
>> Tel:      +44.122349.2372
>> Web:    http://manuelcorpas.com/about/
>> Twitter: @manuelcorpas
>>
>>
>>
>> On 17 November 2011 12:11, Jonathan Warren <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> Hi
>>>
>>> As the 2012 DAS workshop is coming up at the end of February we would like
>>> to hear from people using DAS.
>>> We would be really grateful to receive just a short email from anyone using
>>> DAS or developing DAS with a brief summary about their project and how DAS
>>> fits in, especially if you have not spoken at the DAS workshops at any time.
>>>
>>> Please also say if you would be interested in giving a short presentation at
>>> the workshop in February even if you are not sure if you could make it.
>>> Previous years the presentations have been 15 minutes with 5 minutes for
>>> questions - however this year we intend to be more flexible and so if you
>>> would prefer to give a "lightning talk" of just 5 minutes to update people
>>> or give them a brief overview that will be fine. Links to the previous years
>>> talks can be found here http://www.biodas.org/wiki/DASWorkshop2011#Day_2
>>>
>>> I must emphasise - please give us a summary even if you are not interested
>>> in giving a talk as we would like to know what is going on out there and we
>>> promise not to hound you to give a talk :)
>>>
>>> Thanks in advance
>>>
>>> The Sanger/EBI DAS people.
>>>
>>>
>>> Jonathan Warren
>>> Senior Developer and DAS coordinator
>>> blog: http://biodasman.wordpress.com/
>>> [email protected]
>>> Ext: 2314
>>> Telephone: 01223 492314
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute is operated by Genome ResearchLimited, a
>>> charity registered in England with number 1021457 and acompany registered in
>>> England with number 2742969, whose registeredoffice is 215 Euston Road,
>>> London, NW1 2BE._______________________________________________
>>> DAS mailing list
>>> [email protected]
>>> http://lists.open-bio.org/mailman/listinfo/das
>>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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>
>

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