Privacy Notice for EGA User Account This Privacy Notice explains what personal data is collected by the specific service you are requesting, for what purposes, how it is processed, and how we keep it secure. Note that this service collects personal data directly provided by the user, and also collects personal data from users that is provided by other organisations. 1. Who controls your personal data and how to contact us? European Genome- Phenome Archive - EGA offers a service for permanent archiving and sharing of all types of personally identifiable genetic and phenotypic data resulting from biomedical research projects, jointly managed by European Molecular Biology Laboratory – European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI) and Fundació Centre de Regulació Genòmica - Centre for Genomic Regulation (CRG). EMBL-EBI and CRG represent joint Data Controllers’ of processing of your personal data. They and their Data protection officers may be contacted for data protection queries and for exercising your rights under Section 8. You may contact EMBL-EBI, represented by dr. Thomas Keane, by: email at: tk2@ebi.ac.uk or post at EMBL-EBI, Wellcome Genome Campus, CB10 1SD Hinxton, Cambridgeshire, UK. EMBL’s Data Protection Officer may be contacted by: telephone at +49 6221 387-8590, email at dpo@embl.org, or post at EMBL Heidelberg, Data protection officer, Meyerhofstraße 1, 69117 Heidelberg, Germany. You may contact CRG, whose EGA team is represented by dr. Jordi Rambla de Argila, by: email at jordi.rambla@crg.eu, or post at Fundació Centre de Regulació Genòmica - Centre for Genomic Regulation (CRG), Dr.Aiguader 88, PRBB Building, 08003 Barcelona, Spain. CRG Data protection officer may be contacted by: email at dpo@crg.eu post at Fundació Centre de Regulació Genòmica - Centre for Genomic Regulation (CRG), C/ Dr. Aiguader, 88, PRBB Building, 08003 Barcelona, Spain. 2. Which is the lawful basis for processing personal data? We process your personal data on the grounds of important public interest. For monitoring your activities on the website, we process your personal data on the grounds of important public interest. Such legal basis is found in Article 5(1)(a) of EMBL Internal Policy No 68 on General Data Protection (hereinafter IP 68), which is equivalent to Article 6 (1)(e) of the EU General Data Protection Regulation (hereinafter GDPR) and upon which personal data are processed for the achievement of the aims laid down in 1973 agreement establishing EMBL, such as the promotion of the cooperation in the fundamental research, in the development of advanced instrumentation and in advanced teaching in molecular biology and dissemination of information. 3. What personal data is collected from users of the service? How do we use this personal data? We collect the following personal data from you: Name Email address Title/Position Organisation Organisational affiliation Username and password (to authenticate access to the system) IP Address (for anonymous usage statistics) We process your personal data: to provide you with the authenticated access to the EGA service (opening and managing submission and distribution account), to publicly publish some aggregate data to facilitate scientific research (e.g. number of accounts, geographic distribution), to better understand the needs of the users and to guide future improvements of the service, to create anonymous usage statistics. If you do not provide us with your personal data we will not be able to open the user account and offer you our services or we will only provide you a subset of functionalities available within the service. 4. Who will have access to your personal data? The personal data will be disclosed to: Authorised staff in the data controller’s institutions acting on data controller`s behalf and instructions (for all user account data), Requested dataset Data access committee – DAC will have access to the name, email, organization, affiliation, title/position of the distribution user account, using it for their own purpose of granting access to their datasets. 5. Will your personal data be transferred to third countries (i.e. countries not part of EU/EEA) and/or international organisations? Distribution user account data are in the process of granting access disclosed to dataset(s) DAC, which might be a recipient in countries outside of the European Economic Area. Insofar as the second joint controller may be subject to GDPR, data transfer to and from the first joint controller (EMBL-EBI) is necessary for important reasons of public interest embedded in the aims of the EMBL and justified in the Article 9(4) of IP 68 (equivalent to Article 49(1)(d) of GDPR) read in conjunction with EMBL`s 1973 establishing agreement and Article 179(2) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union. 6. How long do we keep your personal data? All data are stored for as long as you have the account open. Thereafter the storage is prolonged for as long as our service is live, even if you stop using our services. This prolongation is necessary for further scientific research, to ensure legal compliance and security and to facilitate internal and external audits it they arise. By contrast, the log files for the data categories related to anonymous usage statistics (raw web service logs) are processed only for 30 days and thereafter erased. 7. The joint Data Controllers provide these rights regarding your personal data You have the right to: Not be subject to decisions based solely on an automated processing of data (i.e. without human intervention) without you having your views taken into consideration. Request at reasonable intervals and without excessive delay or expense, information about the personal data processed about you. Under your request we will inform you in writing about, for example, the origin of the personal data or the preservation period. Request information to understand data processing activities when the results of these activities are applied to you. It must be clarified that rights under points 4 and 5 are only available whenever you need support whilst using our website. For other processing based on the grounds of important public interest you cannot exercise your rights to object, rectify or erase your personal data according to the Article 13(2)(a)(b) of IP 68 (equivalent to Article 17(3)(b)(d) and Article 21(6) of the GDPR). 8. Supervisory authority If you wish to complain against the processing of your personal data, you may do so by post at: EMBL Heidelberg, Data Protection Committee, Meyerhofstraße 1, 69117 Heidelberg, Germany, or Autoritat Catalana de Protecció de Dades (Catalan Data Protection Authority), C/Rosselló 214, Esc A, 1r 1a, Barcelona 08008, Spain. Published at: February 6, 2019
To examine the role of gene polymorphisms (including functional studies of SNPs) on variations in vaccine-induced immune responses, in approximately 3,000 healthy school-age children, adolescents and young adults/adults, who were vaccinated with measles-containing vaccine (MMR). To achieve greatest power to detect SNPs associated with measles-specific immune response phenotypes, we pooled our data across three genotyping platforms and three cohorts (US cohort, San Diego cohort and Rochester cohort).
Mutations in splicing factor genes are common in myelodysplastic syndromes but the reason for selection of these mutations remains incompletely understood. This study aimed to identify the effect of minor intron retention due to ZRSR2 mutations in myelodysplastic syndromes. Nine samples from patients with myelodysplastic syndromes bearing ZRSR2 mutations and ten samples from patients with myelodysplastic syndromes not bearing any splicing factor mutations were subjected to transcriptomic analysis for mis-splicing events after RNA-sequencing.
This study is designed to help us understand the biological factors that contribute to the development of Cutaneous T Cell Lymphoma (CTCL) through the use of single-cell -omics technologies. The data that will be available include single-cell RNAseq and paired single-cell TCRseq data from the primary lesions of CTCL patients.The number of consented subjects listed here is artificially inflated by one to account for the pooling of all subjects.
In this study, we did a comprehensive exRNA profiling of plasma and serum specimens from healthy pregnant women, sampled at different gestational time points, and including subjects with diverse geographical and ethnic backgrounds. This study also contains samples from male and female healthy donors to provide a baseline. The aim of this study is to identify miRNAs that can predict the gestation age and to build a miRNA profile across gestation using small RNA-seq data.
Tumor samples were collected from a patient with synovial sarcoma, which acquired resistance to ACT targeting NY-ESO-1. Biopsies (n=3; primary, metastasis, and recurrence) were subjected to bulk tumor DNA and RNA sequencing, as well as high-dimensional spatial profiling of RNA and protein targets. Bulk tumor whole exome and RNA sequencing corresponding to all three tumor specimens and whole exome sequencing from patient-matched normal blood are made available through this accession.
Uveal melanoma (UM) is a rare eye cancer that is highly aggressive and leads to metastatic death in up to half of patients. Here, we conduct droplet-based single-cell RNA sequencing of 59,915 neoplastic and non-neoplastic cells from 8 primary and 3 metastatic UMs. Single-cell VDJ sequencing of RNA is conducted to determine clonally expanded B/T- cell populations. Single-cell DNA sequencing of 1 primary and 1 metastasis is utilized.
This study seeks to characterize airway epithelial mRNA and miRNA expression under a variety of experimental conditions. Samples are available from primary human cell cultures as well as cell lines grown under a variety of experimental conditions as documented in the phenotype and conditions associated with each individual sample. For some experiments, cells on plastic were exposed to cigarette smoke condensate to evaluate the effects of smoking. FOSL1 is a target gene for regulation by MIR34A family microRNAs.
This collection contains all of NCIs authorized individual-level genomic datasets currently in dbGaP that are approved for Cancer Research (DS-CA) use only and limitations outlined in the model Data Use Certification Agreement. Access to this study will include any additional authorized individual-level DS-CA datasets that become available. Renewal of this study is required annually. To request access to this study collection, select phs003967.v1.p1 in the dbGaP Authorized Access System.
This study is designed to assess neurobehavioral performance, as well as molecular and physiological changes associated with variations in timing and quantity of sleep. Gene expression changes associated with neurobehavioral (cognitive) performance were assessed in a time-series among individuals randomly assigned to four separate sleep conditions during a 10-day inpatient study: a well-rested control, sleep restriction with nighttime sleep, sleep restriction with daytime sleep to roughly simulate shiftwork schedules, and total (acute) sleep deprivation.