European research consortium archive

BLUEPRINT

A BLUEPRINT of Haematopoietic Epigenomes

Research index

About

BLUEPRINT is a high impact FP7 project aiming to produce a blueprint of haemopoetic epigenomes. Our goal is to apply highly sophisticated functional genomics analysis on a clearly defined set of primarily human samples from healthy and diseased individuals, and to provide at least 100

The purpose of this site is to help you find data produced by the BLUEPRINT consortium.

A more detailed explanation of the methods to access BLUEPRINT data can be found on the Data access page.

All data made available by the consortium is subject to the BLUEPRINT data reuse policy.

DCC portal Help page has more detailed descriptions and links to walkthrough tutorials for these pages.

A complete history of Blueprint releases can be found on the release history page.

Release composition by assay type

Number of experiments per release

CNIO & BSC host the BLUEPRINT Data Analysis Portal. A tutorial for the portal is available.

Blueprint data can also be accessed using DeepBlue. A manual and a tutorial is also available.

Genomatix provide a visual interface for exploring & analysing BLUEPRINT data. They have also produced a webinar, explaining the features of the software.

BLUEPRINT data can be viewed in the UCSC and ensembl browsers through a track hub. We have produced a tutorial describing how to use this. Alternatively you can use these links to add the current track hub to a genome browser:

Data from BLUEPRINT is included in the IHEC data grid.

Data Analysis Portal

CNIO & BSC host the BLUEPRINT Data Analysis Portal. A tutorial for the portal is available.

DeepBlue

Blueprint data can also be accessed using DeepBlue. A manual and a tutorial is also available.

visual interface

Genomatix provide a visual interface for exploring & analysing BLUEPRINT data. They have also produced a webinar, explaining the features of the software.

track hub

BLUEPRINT data can be viewed in the UCSC and ensembl browsers through a track hub. We have produced a tutorial describing how to use this. Alternatively you can use these links to add the current track hub to a genome browser: