Database Commons
Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

dbVOR

General information

URL: https://watson.hgen.pitt.edu/register;;https://watson.hgen.pitt.edu/register/docs/dbvor.html
Full name: A database system for importing pedigree, phenotype and genotype data and exporting selected subsets
Description: dbVOR is the database system that store and retrieve genotype information from experiments. dbVOR is specifically designed for linkage studies containing families, and so stores parent data. It also stores marker genetic positions (as well as base pair positions); in addition, it stores map information for multiple builds.
Year founded: 2015
Last update:
Version: 1.11
Accessibility:
Accessible
Country/Region: United States

Contact information

University/Institution: University of Pittsburgh
Address: Department of Biostatistics, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
City: pittsburgh
Province/State: Pennsylvania
Country/Region: United States
Contact name (PI/Team): Daniel E Weeks
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): weeks@pitt.edu

Publications

25887129
dbVOR: a database system for importing pedigree, phenotype and genotype data and exporting selected subsets. [PMID: 25887129]
Baron RV, Conley YP, Gorin MB, Weeks DE.

BACKGROUND: When studying the genetics of a human trait, we typically have to manage both genome-wide and targeted genotype data. There can be overlap of both people and markers from different genotyping experiments; the overlap can introduce several kinds of problems. Most times the overlapping genotypes are the same, but sometimes they are different. Occasionally, the lab will return genotypes using a different allele labeling scheme (for example 1/2 vs A/C). Sometimes, the genotype for a person/marker index is unreliable or missing. Further, over time some markers are merged and bad samples are re-run under a different sample name. We need a consistent picture of the subset of data we have chosen to work with even though there might possibly be conflicting measurements from multiple data sources.
RESULTS: We have developed the dbVOR database, which is designed to hold data efficiently for both genome-wide and targeted experiments. The data are indexed for fast retrieval by person and marker. In addition, we store pedigree and phenotype data for our subjects. The dbVOR database allows us to select subsets of the data by several different criteria and to merge their results into a coherent and consistent whole. Data may be filtered by: family, person, trait value, markers, chromosomes, and chromosome ranges. The results can be presented in columnar, Mega2, or PLINK format.
CONCLUSIONS: dbVOR serves our needs well. It is freely available from https://watson.hgen.pitt.edu/register . Documentation for dbVOR can be found at https://watson.hgen.pitt.edu/register/docs/dbvor.html .

BMC Bioinformatics. 2015:16() | 1 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2026-04-04)

Ranking

All databases:
6852/6932 (1.168%)
Genotype phenotype and variation:
997/1012 (1.581%)
Interaction:
1194/1200 (0.583%)
Health and medicine:
1730/1755 (1.481%)
Metadata:
708/723 (2.213%)
6852
Total Rank
1
Citations
0.091
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Record metadata

Created on: 2018-01-27
Curated by:
Sidra Younas [2018-04-10]
Zhaohua Li [2018-01-27]