LifeChange Data Access Committee
The LifeChange study aimed at tracking the biological consequences of the societal changes undergone by the Yakut people of Far Eastern Siberia, after the colonization of the region by Russians in the 17th century. This study builds upon more than 15 years of archaeological research conducted in Yakutia, Sakha Republic, an autonomous region of the Russian Federation located in northeastern Siberia. The fieldwork was conducted under the MAFSO program (“Mission Archéologique Française en Sibérie Orientale”, or “French Archaeological Mission in Eastern Siberia”), a collaboration between French researchers and local Yakut experts, including scholars from North-Eastern Federal University in Yakutsk. The program was supported by several inter-university collaborative research agreements, notably between Université Paul Sabatier, Krasnoyarsk State Medical University, and North-Eastern Federal University in Yakutsk. It also received endorsement from the Institute of Ecology and Evolution at CNRS through the International Associated Laboratory “Co-evolution Human-Environment in Eastern Siberia”.
The LifeChange Data Access Committee, composed of French and Russian archaeogeneticists, geneticists and archaeologists, reviews any access request to LifeChange data, consisting of genomes of ancient and modern Yakut, Eveni and Evenki individuals sampled in Eastern Siberia for the LifeChange study. The DAC grants access to any academic researcher aiming to study the population history of autochthonous peoples from Siberia. When reviewing data access requests, the DAC members ensure that the applicant will not re-use the data to trace present-day descendants of studied ancient individuals. They also ensure that secondary use of the modern genomic data is conducted in full respect of the conditions stipulated in living participants’ informed consent. Specifically, the applicant is not authorised to (i) use the data for diagnostic purposes, (ii) store the data outside of secure servers, (iii) reidentify research participants, and (iv) share the data with a third party.
Dac
EGAC50000000713
Native American gene flow into Polynesia predating Easter Island settlement
The possibility of voyaging contact between prehistoric Polynesian and Native American populations has long intrigued researchers. Proponents have pointed to the existence of New World crops, such as the sweet potato and bottle gourd, in the Polynesian archaeological record, but nowhere else outside the pre-Columbian Americas while critics have argued that these botanical dispersals need not have been human mediated. The Norwegian explorer Thor Heyerdahl controversially suggested that prehistoric South American populations had an important role in the settlement of east Polynesia and particularly of Easter Island (Rapa Nui). Several limited molecular genetic studies have reached opposing conclusions, and the possibility continues to be as hotly contested today as it was when first suggested. Here we analyse genome-wide variation in individuals from islands across Polynesia for signs of Native American admixture, analysing 807 individuals from 17 island populations and 15 Pacific coast Native American groups. We find conclusive evidence for prehistoric contact of Polynesian individuals with Native American individuals (around AD 1200) contemporaneous with the settlement of remote Oceania. Our analyses suggest strongly that a single contact event occurred in eastern Polynesia, before the settlement of Rapa Nui, between Polynesian individuals and a Native American group most closely related to the indigenous inhabitants of present-day Colombia.
Study
EGAS00001004209
Alterations in the gut microbiome in inflammatory arthritis implicate key taxa and metabolic pathways across arthritis phenotypes
The gut microbiome has been implicated in several inflammatory conditions, but large-scale metagenomic evaluations have not yet traced the routes by which immunity in the gut affects systemic inflammatory diseases, such as inflammatory arthritis. To characterize the community structure and associated functional processes driving gut microbial involvement in arthritis, we investigated a total of 440 stool shotgun metagenomes comprising 275 adults diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, or psoriatic arthritis, along with 165 healthy control individuals and individuals with joint pain without an underlying inflammatory cause.
Study
EGAS00001005525
The Influence of Gut Microbiota on the Speciation and Toxicity of Mercury During Pregnancy
There are few studies that have characterized maternal gut microbiota and fetal methylmercury exposure, yet microbes likely modulate this relationship. The primary objective of our pilot study was to determine associations between gut microbial taxa and mercury concentrations in multiple biomarkers (stool, hair, and cord blood). Our secondary objective was to determine the contribution of gut microbial mercury methylation to stool methylmercury.
Study
phs000970
Deep genetic affinity between coastal Pacific and Amazonian natives evidenced by Australasian ancestry
Analysis of the genetic affinity between coastal Pacific and Amazonian natives (i.e. "Y population" ancestry). Here we analyzed a dataset of newly generated data from four Brazilian indigenous communities genotyped in the Axiom Human Origins array combined with publicly available data from other Native American populations.
Study
EGAS00001005022
Spatially resolved antigen receptor and gene expression data from breast cancer patients
The dataset includes spatially-resolved and single-cell antigen receptor, as well as gene expression, data from two different HER2+ breast cancer patients. The tumor piece obtained during surgery from each patient was divided into several regions and tissue sections were used for spatial transcriptomics (Visium, 10x genomics). As indicated, some tissue sections were analyzed by a new method (Spatial VDJ) to spatially resolve antigen receptor sequences (target capture), which was developed in our publication. In parallel, tissue pieces from the same tumor were dissociated for single-cell gene expression analysis (10x genomics GEX, VDJ, and feature barcoding/Hash Tag Oligonucleotide). The deposited data is in the form of fastq files. All processed data, metadata, micrographs of the tissue sections (of those used for spatial transcriptomics), and scripts used for the analysis are publicly available at Zenodo (DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.7961605). Final libraries were sequenced on NextSeq2000 (Illumina) or NovaSeq6000 (Illumina) and analyzed with Cell Ranger, Seurat, Space Ranger, and STutility pipelines.
Dataset
EGAD00001011061
PCA Atlas Visium spatial transcriptomics data (FASTQs, spaceranger BAMs and Visium mapping tables)
This dataset contains Visium spatial transcriptomics data for the PCA Atlas study EGAS00001008332. It includes:
- Raw Visium FASTQ runs (EGAR00004172272–EGAR00004172283) for all libraries.
- spaceranger alignment BAM analyses for those libraries where BAM output was generated.
- visium.csv: a slide-level mapping table linking Visium slide samples to EGA sample accessions, sequencing runs/experiments and spaceranger BAM analyses.
- visium_tma.csv: a TMA mapping table describing how mini-TMA slides relate slide-level Visium libraries to tissue-level samples/cores.
Together these objects provide the raw and aligned Visium data and the technical/biological mappings needed to understand and reuse the spatial transcriptomics component of the PCA Atlas.
High resolution histology images are available from the following Zenodo repository, along with additional spaceranger outs for each slide:
- https://zenodo.org/records/17411292
Dataset
EGAD00001015796
Sequencing data for study Dissociation of solid tumour tissues with cold active protease for single-cell RNA-seq minimizes conserved collagenase-associated stress responses for library TENX051_PBC04633_002
Single-cell RNA-sequencing data generated using the 10X genomics chromium platform, comprising patient derived xenograft, cell line, and primary tumour data. This includes different digestion conditions (37C collagenase vs 6C cold protease) and FACS sorting for live, dying, and dead cells. 12 samples; filetype=fastq
Dataset
EGAD00001005169
Sequencing data for study Dissociation of solid tumour tissues with cold active protease for single-cell RNA-seq minimizes conserved collagenase-associated stress responses for library TENX_015_SA604X6XB01979_001
Single-cell RNA-sequencing data generated using the 10X genomics chromium platform, comprising patient derived xenograft, cell line, and primary tumour data. This includes different digestion conditions (37C collagenase vs 6C cold protease) and FACS sorting for live, dying, and dead cells. 3 samples; filetype=fastq
Dataset
EGAD00001005155
Sequencing data for study Dissociation of solid tumour tissues with cold active protease for single-cell RNA-seq minimizes conserved collagenase-associated stress responses for library TENX021_SA854_001
Single-cell RNA-sequencing data generated using the 10X genomics chromium platform, comprising patient derived xenograft, cell line, and primary tumour data. This includes different digestion conditions (37C collagenase vs 6C cold protease) and FACS sorting for live, dying, and dead cells. 3 samples; filetype=fastq
Dataset
EGAD00001005141