Real-time tracking of pathogen evolution Nextstrain is an open-source project to harness the scientific and public health potential of pathogen genome data. We provide a continually-updated view of publicly available data alongside powerful analytic and visualization tools for use by the community. Our goal is to aid epidemiological understanding and improve outbreak response. If you have any questions, or simply want to say hi, please give us a shout at hello@. Novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) We are incorporating nCoV genomes as soon as they are shared and providing analyses and situation reports. Please see below for the latest updates. We have received a number of generous offers to contribute to the development of Nextstrain. Please see here for how you may be able help! Explore pathogens Genomic analyses of specific pathogens kept up-to-date by the Nextstrain team From the community Analyses by independent groups stored and accessed via public GitHub repos Narratives Narratives are a method of data-driven storytelling. They allow authoring of content which is displayed alongside a view into the data. See here to find out more. Mentions on Twitter Philosophy Pathogen Phylogenies In the course of an infection and over an epidemic, pathogens naturally accumulate random mutations to their genomes. This is an inevitable consequence of error-prone genome replication. Since different genomes typically pick up different mutations, mutations can be used as a marker of transmission in which closely related genomes indicate closely related infections. By reconstructing a phylogeny we can learn about important epidemiological phenomena such as spatial spread, introduction timings and epidemic growth rate. Actionable Inferences However, if pathogen genome sequences are going to inform public health interventions, then analyses have to be rapidly conducted and results widely disseminated. Current scientific publishing practices hinder the rapid dissemination of epidemiologically relevant results. We thought an open online system that implements robust bioinformatic pipelines to synthesize data from across research groups has the best capacity to make epidemiologically actionable inferences. This Website This website aims to provide a real-time snapshot of evolving pathogen populations and to provide interactive data visualizations to virologists, epidemiologists, public health officials and citizen scientists. Through interactive data visualizations, we aim to allow exploration of continually up-to-date datasets, providing a novel surveillance tool to the scientific and public health communities. Future Directions Nextstrain is under active development and we have big plans for its future, including visualization, bioinformatics analysis and an increasing number and variety of datasets. If you have any questions or ideas, please give us a shout at hello@. A bioinformatics and data viz toolkit Nextstrain provides an open-source toolkit enabling the bioinformatics and visualization you see on this site. Tweak our analyses and create your own using the same tools we do. We aim to empower the wider genomic epidemiology and public health communities. Hadfield et al., Nextstrain: real-time tracking of pathogen evolution, Bioinformatics (2018)Nextstrain is built by All source code is freely available under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License. Screenshots may be used under a CC-BY-4.0 license and attribution to must be provided. This work is made possible by the open sharing of genetic data by research groups from all over the world. We gratefully acknowledge their contributions. Special thanks to Kristian Andersen, David Blazes, Peter Bogner, Matt Cotten, Ana Crisan, Gytis Dudas, Vivien Dugan, Karl Erlandson, Nuno Faria, Jennifer Gardy, Becky Kondor, Dylan George, Ian Goodfellow, Betz Halloran, Christian Happi, Jeff Joy, Paul Kellam, Philippe Lemey, Nick Loman, Sebastian Maurer-Stroh, Oliver Pybus, Andrew Rambaut, Colin Russell, Pardis Sabeti, Katherine Siddle, Kristof Theys, Dave Wentworth, Shirlee Wohl and Nathan Yozwiak for comments, suggestions and data sharing. Splash page images stylised in Lunapic. Zika drawing by David Goodwill, Dengue EM by Zhang et al., Ebola EM by Frederick Murphy / CDC, Seasonal Influenza, Lassa and West Nile Virus images by Cynthia Goldsmith / CDC, Avian Influenza (A/H7N9) by Cynthia Goldsmith and Thomas Rowe / CDC, Mumps by the CDC, Measles by Shmuel Rozenblatt, Enterovirus by Shingler et al., Tuberculosis by Ray Butle, RSV by NIAID / NIH, Cassava Leaf by Wilmer Cuellar, Wheat yellow rust (Puccinia striiformis) by Yue Jin / USDA, coronavirus by Dr. Fred Murphy / CDC. ? 2015-2020 Trevor Bedford and Richard Neher |
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