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Attention: NDA Data Packaging, Downloading, and miNDAR Databases Available by January 17, 2025

1 Numbers reported are subjects by age
New Trial
New Project

Format should be in the following format: Activity Code, Institute Abbreviation, and Serial Number. Grant Type, Support Year, and Suffix should be excluded. For example, grant 1R01MH123456-01A1 should be entered R01MH123456

Please select an experiment type below

Collection - Use Existing Experiment
To associate an experiment to the current collection, just select an axperiment from the table below then click the associate experiment button to persist your changes (saving the collection is not required). Note that once an experiment has been associated to two or more collections, the experiment will not longer be editable.

The table search feature is case insensitive and targets the experiment id, experiment name and experiment type columns. The experiment id is searched only when the search term entered is a number, and filtered using a startsWith comparison. When the search term is not numeric the experiment name is used to filter the results.
SelectExperiment IdExperiment NameExperiment Type
Created On
24HI-NGS_R1Omics02/16/2011
475MB1-10 (CHOP)Omics06/07/2016
490Illumina Infinium PsychArray BeadChip AssayOmics07/07/2016
501PharmacoBOLD Resting StatefMRI07/27/2016
506PVPREFOmics08/05/2016
509ABC-CT Resting v2EEG08/18/2016
13Comparison of FI expression in Autistic and Neurotypical Homo SapiensOmics12/28/2010
18AGRE/Broad Affymetrix 5.0 Genotype ExperimentOmics01/06/2011
22Stitching PCR SequencingOmics02/14/2011
26ASD_MethylationOmics03/01/2011
29Microarray family 03 (father, mother, sibling)Omics03/24/2011
37Standard paired-end sequencing of BCRsOmics04/19/2011
38Illumina Mate-Pair BCR sequencingOmics04/19/2011
39Custom Jumping LibrariesOmics04/19/2011
40Custom CapBPOmics04/19/2011
41ImmunofluorescenceOmics05/11/2011
43Autism brain sample genotyping, IlluminaOmics05/16/2011
47ARRA Autism Sequencing Collaboration at Baylor. SOLiD 4 SystemOmics08/01/2011
53AGRE Omni1-quadOmics10/11/2011
59AGP genotypingOmics04/03/2012
60Ultradeep 454 sequencing of synaptic genes from postmortem cerebella of individuals with ASD and neurotypical controlsOmics06/23/2012
63Microemulsion PCR and Targeted Resequencing for Variant Detection in ASDOmics07/20/2012
76Whole Genome Sequencing in Autism FamiliesOmics01/03/2013
519RestingfMRI11/08/2016
90Genotyped IAN SamplesOmics07/09/2013
91NJLAGS Axiom Genotyping ArrayOmics07/16/2013
93AGP genotyping (CNV)Omics09/06/2013
106Longitudinal Sleep Study. H20 200. Channel set 2EEG11/07/2013
107Longitudinal Sleep Study. H20 200. Channel set 3EEG11/07/2013
108Longitudinal Sleep Study. AURA 200EEG11/07/2013
105Longitudinal Sleep Study. H20 200. Channel set 1EEG11/07/2013
109Longitudinal Sleep Study. AURA 400EEG11/07/2013
116Gene Expression Analysis WG-6Omics01/07/2014
131Jeste Lab UCLA ACEii: Charlie Brown and Sesame Street - Project 1Eye Tracking02/27/2014
132Jeste Lab UCLA ACEii: Animacy - Project 1Eye Tracking02/27/2014
133Jeste Lab UCLA ACEii: Mom Stranger - Project 2Eye Tracking02/27/2014
134Jeste Lab UCLA ACEii: Face Emotion - Project 3Eye Tracking02/27/2014
145AGRE/FMR1_Illumina.JHUOmics04/14/2014
146AGRE/MECP2_Sanger.JHUOmics04/14/2014
147AGRE/MECP2_Junior.JHUOmics04/14/2014
151Candidate Gene Identification in familial AutismOmics06/09/2014
152NJLAGS Whole Genome SequencingOmics07/01/2014
154Math Autism Study - Vinod MenonfMRI07/15/2014
155RestingfMRI07/25/2014
156SpeechfMRI07/25/2014
159EmotionfMRI07/25/2014
160syllable contrastEEG07/29/2014
167School-age naturalistic stimuliEye Tracking09/19/2014
44AGRE/Broad Affymetrix 5.0 Genotype ExperimentOmics06/27/2011
45Exome Sequencing of 20 Sporadic Cases of Autism Spectrum DisorderOmics07/15/2011
Collection - Add Experiment
Add Supporting Documentation
Select File

To add an existing Data Structure, enter its title in the search bar. If you need to request changes, select the indicator "No, it requires changes to meet research needs" after selecting the Structure, and upload the file with the request changes specific to the selected Data Structure. Your file should follow the Request Changes Procedure. If the Data Structure does not exist, select "Request New Data Structure" and upload the appropriate zip file.

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Collection Updated

Your Collection is now in Data Analysis phase and exempt from biannual submissions. Analyzed data is still expected prior to publication or no later than the project end date.

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[CMS] Please confirm that you will not be enrolling any more subjects and that all raw data has been collected and submitted.
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Collection Summary Collection Charts
Collection Title Collection Investigators Collection Description
1/2-Somatic mosaicism and autism spectrum disorder
Christopher A. Walsh 
Somatic mutations are de novo mutations that occur after fertilization. Once a cell has acquired a somatic mutation, all of its progenitors will also carry that mutation. Thus, if a cell acquires a mutation early in embryonic development, the mutation will be carried by many of the cells in the body. However, if the mutation occurs late in development, then only a few cells might carry it. Thus, it is possible to have mutations that only occur in the brain, or a small region of the brain. It has been known for a while that somatic mutations can cause cancer, and recent studies are showing that somatic mutations are associated with neurodevelopmental disorders resembling autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) both in terms of their high de novo mutation rate and in terms of their associated symptoms such as intellectual disability and epilepsy. We hypothesize that somatic mutations represent a significant cause of (ASDs) because of the high rate of de novo mutations associated with ASDs, the importance of somatic mutations in some genes known to cause ASDs, and the importance of somatic mutations in other developmental brain disorders with features that overlap ASDs. The technical and resource limitations that had prevented a systematic study of the role of somatic mutations in ASDs have now been overcome thanks to 1] Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS), which allows for the deep sequencing of genes and their transcripts with the ability to analyze each sequence, and 2] tissue banks that have collected brain specimens from individuals who had ASD. In this collaborative UO1 we will employ complementary approaches to systematically identify and functionally characterize somatic brain mutations associated with ASD. For causative somatic mutations identified in ASD brain, we will use techniques developed in our labs to examine individual brain cells for the presence of somatic mutation. This will provide us with a map of what regions of the brain, and what cells types in the brain carry these somatic mutations. We will also model and functionally characterize ASD- associated brain mutations in induced pluripotent cells and mice. This study could 1] improve the genetic diagnosis of ASD; by assessing the prevalence of somatic mutations as a cause of ASD, 2] provide a paradigm that may apply to other complex neuropsychiatric diseases (such as schizophrenia), and 3] improve our understanding of the mechanisms underlying ASD by creating a map of brain regions and cell types involved in ASD.
NIMH Data Archive
07/10/2018
Limited to neurological disorders
Brain Somatic Mosaicism Network (BSMN)
Funding Completed
Close Out
No
$3,497,084.00
79
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NIH - Extramural None



U01MH106883-01 1/2-Somatic mosaicism and autism spectrum disorder 05/01/2015 01/31/2020 Not Reported Not Reported BOSTON CHILDRENS HOSPITAL $3,497,084.00

helpcenter.collection.general-tab

NDA Help Center

Collection - General Tab

Fields available for edit on the top portion of the page include:

  • Collection Title
  • Investigators
  • Collection Description
  • Collection Phase
  • Funding Source
  • Clinical Trials

Collection Phase: The current status of a research project submitting data to an NDA Collection, based on the timing of the award and/or the data that have been submitted.

  • Pre-Enrollment: The default entry made when the NDA Collection is created.
  • Enrolling: Data have been submitted to the NDA Collection or the NDA Data Expected initial submission date has been reached for at least one data structure category in the NDA Collection.
  • Data Analysis: Subject level data collection for the research project is completed and has been submitted to the NDA Collection. The NDA Collection owner or the NDA Help Desk may set this phase when they’ve confirmed data submission is complete and submitted subject counts match at least 90% of the target enrollment numbers in the NDA Data Expected. Data submission reminders will be turned off for the NDA Collection.
  • Funding Completed: The NIH grant award (or awards) associated with the NDA Collection has reached its end date. NDA Collections in Funding Completed phase are assigned a subphase to indicate the status of data submission.
    • The Data Expected Subphase indicates that NDA expects more data will be submitted
    • The Closeout Subphase indicates the data submission is complete.
    • The Sharing Not Met Subphase indicates that data submission was not completed as expected.

Blinded Clinical Trial Status:

  • This status is set by a Collection Owner and indicates the research project is a double blinded clinical trial. When selected, the public view of Data Expected will show the Data Expected items and the Submission Dates, but the targeted enrollment and subjects submitted counts will not be displayed.
  • Targeted enrollment and subjects submitted counts are visible only to NDA Administrators and to the NDA Collection or as the NDA Collection Owner.
  • When an NDA Collection that is flagged Blinded Clinical Trial reaches the maximum data sharing date for that Data Repository (see https://nda.nih.gov/nda/sharing-regimen.html), the embargo on Data Expected information is released.

Funding Source

The organization(s) responsible for providing the funding is listed here.

Supporting Documentation

Users with Submission privileges, as well as Collection Owners, Program Officers, and those with Administrator privileges, may upload and attach supporting documentation. By default, supporting documentation is shared to the general public, however, the option is also available to limit this information to qualified researchers only.

Grant Information

Identifiable details are displayed about the Project of which the Collection was derived from. You may click in the Project Number to view a full report of the Project captured by the NIH.

Clinical Trials

Any data that is collected to support or further the research of clinical studies will be available here. Collection Owners and those with Administrator privileges may add new clinical trials.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • How does the NIMH Data Archive (NDA) determine which Permission Group data are submitted into?
    During Collection creation, NDA staff determine the appropriate Permission Group based on the type of data to be submitted, the type of access that will be available to data access users, and the information provided by the Program Officer during grant award.
  • How do I know when a NDA Collection has been created?
    When a Collection is created by NDA staff, an email notification will automatically be sent to the PI(s) of the grant(s) associated with the Collection to notify them.
  • Is a single grant number ever associated with more than one Collection?
    The NDA system does not allow for a single grant to be associated with more than one Collection; therefore, a single grant will not be listed in the Grant Information section of a Collection for more than one Collection.
  • Why is there sometimes more than one grant included in a Collection?
    In general, each Collection is associated with only one grant; however, multiple grants may be associated if the grant has multiple competing segments for the same grant number or if multiple different grants are all working on the same project and it makes sense to hold the data in one Collection (e.g., Cooperative Agreements).

Glossary

  • Administrator Privilege
    A privilege provided to a user associated with an NDA Collection or NDA Study whereby that user can perform a full range of actions including providing privileges to other users.
  • Collection Owner
    Generally, the Collection Owner is the contact PI listed on a grant. Only one NDA user is listed as the Collection owner. Most automated emails are primarily sent to the Collection Owner.
  • Collection Phase
    The Collection Phase provides information on data submission as opposed to grant/project completion so while the Collection phase and grant/project phase may be closely related they are often different. Collection users with Administrative Privileges are encouraged to edit the Collection Phase. The Program Officer as listed in eRA (for NIH funded grants) may also edit this field. Changes must be saved by clicking the Save button at the bottom of the page. This field is sortable alphabetically in ascending or descending order. Collection Phase options include:
    • Pre-Enrollment: A grant/project has started, but has not yet enrolled subjects.
    • Enrolling: A grant/project has begun enrolling subjects. Data submission is likely ongoing at this point.
    • Data Analysis: A grant/project has completed enrolling subjects and has completed all data submissions.
    • Funding Completed: A grant/project has reached the project end date.
  • Collection Title
    An editable field with the title of the Collection, which is often the title of the grant associated with the Collection.
  • Grant
    Provides the grant number(s) for the grant(s) associated with the Collection. The field is a hyperlink so clicking on the Grant number will direct the user to the grant information in the NIH Research Portfolio Online Reporting Tools (RePORT) page.
  • Supporting Documentation
    Various documents and materials to enable efficient use of the data by investigators unfamiliar with the project and may include the research protocol, questionnaires, and study manuals.
  • NIH Research Initiative
    NDA Collections may be organized by scientific similarity into NIH Research Initiatives, to facilitate query tool user experience. NIH Research Initiatives map to one or multiple Funding Opportunity Announcements.
  • Permission Group
    Access to shared record-level data in NDA is provisioned at the level of a Permission Group. NDA Permission Groups consist of one or multiple NDA Collections that contain data with the same subject consents.
  • Planned Enrollment
    Number of human subject participants to be enrolled in an NIH-funded clinical research study. The data is provided in competing applications and annual progress reports.
  • Actual Enrollment
    Number of human subjects enrolled in an NIH-funded clinical research study. The data is provided in annual progress reports.
  • NDA Collection
    A virtual container and organization structure for data and associated documentation from one grant or one large project/consortium. It contains tools for tracking data submission and allows investigators to define a wide array of other elements that provide context for the data, including all general information regarding the data and source project, experimental parameters used to collect any event-based data contained in the Collection, methods, and other supporting documentation. They also allow investigators to link underlying data to an NDA Study, defining populations and subpopulations specific to research aims.
  • Data Use Limitations
    Data Use Limitations (DULs) describe the appropriate secondary use of a dataset and are based on the original informed consent of a research participant. NDA only accepts consent-based data use limitations defined by the NIH Office of Science Policy.
  • Total Subjects Shared
    The total number of unique subjects for whom data have been shared and are available for users with permission to access data.
IDNameCreated DateStatusType
1130Whole_genome_sequencing_HiseqXten_NYG12/19/2018ApprovedOmics
1138Whole_genome_sequencing_HiseqXten_PCR-Free12/30/2018ApprovedOmics
helpcenter.collection.experiments-tab

NDA Help Center

Collection - Experiments

The number of Experiments included is displayed in parentheses next to the tab name. You may download all experiments associated with the Collection via the Download button. You may view individual experiments by clicking the Experiment Name and add them to the Filter Cart via the Add to Cart button.

Collection Owners, Program Officers, and users with Submission or Administrative Privileges for the Collection may create or edit an Experiment.

Please note: The creation of an NDA Experiment does not necessarily mean that data collected, according to the defined Experiment, has been submitted or shared.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Can an Experiment be associated with more than one Collection?

    Yes -see the “Copy” button in the bottom left when viewing an experiment. There are two actions that can be performed via this button:

    1. Copy the experiment with intent for modifications.
    2. Associate the experiment to the collection. No modifications can be made to the experiment.

Glossary

  • Experiment Status
    An Experiment must be Approved before data using the associated Experiment_ID may be uploaded.
  • Experiment ID
    The ID number automatically generated by NDA which must be included in the appropriate file when uploading data to link the Experiment Definition to the subject record.
Brain and Tissue Bank Form Clinical Assessments 19
Genomics Sample Genomics 79
Genomics Subject Genomics 79
helpcenter.collection.shared-data-tab

NDA Help Center

Collection - Shared Data

This tab provides a quick overview of the Data Structure title, Data Type, and Number of Subjects that are currently Shared for the Collection. The information presented in this tab is automatically generated by NDA and cannot be edited. If no information is visible on this tab, this would indicate the Collection does not have shared data or the data is private.

The shared data is available to other researchers who have permission to access data in the Collection's designated Permission Group(s). Use the Download button to get all shared data from the Collection to the Filter Cart.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • How will I know if another researcher uses data that I shared through the NIMH Data Archive (NDA)?
    To see what data your project have submitted are being used by a study, simply go the Associated Studies tab of your collection. Alternatively, you may review an NDA Study Attribution Report available on the General tab.
  • Can I get a supplement to share data from a completed research project?
    Often it becomes more difficult to organize and format data electronically after the project has been completed and the information needed to create a GUID may not be available; however, you may still contact a program staff member at the appropriate funding institution for more information.
  • Can I get a supplement to share data from a research project that is still ongoing?
    Unlike completed projects where researchers may not have the information needed to create a GUID and/or where the effort needed to organize and format data becomes prohibitive, ongoing projects have more of an opportunity to overcome these challenges. Please contact a program staff member at the appropriate funding institution for more information.

Glossary

  • Data Structure
    A defined organization and group of Data Elements to represent an electronic definition of a measure, assessment, questionnaire, or collection of data points. Data structures that have been defined in the NDA Data Dictionary are available at https://nda.nih.gov/general-query.html?q=query=data-structure
  • Data Type
    A grouping of data by similar characteristics such as Clinical Assessments, Omics, or Neurosignal data.
  • Shared
    The term 'Shared' generally means available to others; however, there are some slightly different meanings based on what is Shared. A Shared NDA Study is viewable and searchable publicly regardless of the user's role or whether the user has an NDA account. A Shared NDA Study does not necessarily mean that data used in the NDA Study have been shared as this is independently determined. Data are shared according the schedule defined in a Collection's Data Expected Tab and/or in accordance with data sharing expectations in the NDA Data Sharing Terms and Conditions. Additionally, Supporting Documentation uploaded to a Collection may be shared independent of whether data are shared.

Collection Owners and those with Collection Administrator permission, may edit a collection. The following is currently available for Edit on this page:

Publications

Publications relevant to NDA data are listed below. Most displayed publications have been associated with the grant within Pubmed. Use the "+ New Publication" button to add new publications. Publications relevant/not relevant to data expected are categorized. Relevant publications are then linked to the underlying data by selecting the Create Study link. Study provides the ability to define cohorts, assign subjects, define outcome measures and lists the study type, data analysis and results. Analyzed data and results are expected in this way.

PubMed IDStudyTitleJournalAuthorsDateStatus
39388546Create StudySomatic mosaicism in schizophrenia brains reveals prenatal mutational processes.Science (New York, N.Y.)Maury, Eduardo A; Jones, Attila; Seplyarskiy, Vladimir; Nguyen, Thanh Thanh L; Rosenbluh, Chaggai; Bae, Taejong; Wang, Yifan; Abyzov, Alexej; Khoshkhoo, Sattar; Chahine, Yasmine; Zhao, Sijing; Venkatesh, Sanan; Root, Elise; Voloudakis, Georgios; Roussos, Panagiotis; Brain Somatic Mosaicism Network‡; Park, Peter J; Akbarian, Schahram; Brennand, Kristen; Reilly, Steven; Lee, Eunjung A; Sunyaev, Shamil R; Walsh, Christopher A; Chess, AndrewOctober 11, 2024Not Determined
39079538Create StudyCell-type-specific effects of autism-associated 15q duplication syndrome in the human brain.American journal of human geneticsDias, Caroline; Mo, Alisa; Cai, Chunhui; Sun, Liang; Cabral, Kristen; Brownstein, Catherine A; Rockowitz, Shira; Walsh, Christopher AAugust 8, 2024Not Determined
38826276Create StudyCell-type-specific effects of autism-associated chromosome 15q11.2-13.1 duplications in human brain.bioRxiv : the preprint server for biologyDias, Caroline; Mo, Alisa; Cai, Chunhui; Sun, Liang; Cabral, Kristen; Brownstein, Catherine A; Rockowitz, Shira; Walsh, Christopher AMay 22, 2024Not Determined
37986891Create StudyCell lineage analysis with somatic mutations reveals late divergence of neuronal cell types and cortical areas in human cerebral cortex.bioRxiv : the preprint server for biologyKim, Sonia Nan; Viswanadham, Vinayak V; Doan, Ryan N; Dou, Yanmei; Bizzotto, Sara; Khoshkhoo, Sattar; Huang, August Yue; Yeh, Rebecca; Chhouk, Brian; Truong, Alex; Chappell, Kathleen M; Beaudin, Marc; Barton, Alison; Akula, Shyam K; Rento, Lariza; Lodato, Michael; Ganz, Javier; Szeto, Ryan A; Li, Pengpeng; Tsai, Jessica W; Hill, Robert Sean; Park, Peter J; Walsh, Christopher ANovember 6, 2023Not Determined
37985666Create StudyGenomic data resources of the Brain Somatic Mosaicism Network for neuropsychiatric diseases.Scientific dataGarrison, McKinzie A; Jang, Yeongjun; Bae, Taejeong; Cherskov, Adriana; Emery, Sarah B; Fasching, Liana; Jones, Attila; Moldovan, John B; Molitor, Cindy; Pochareddy, Sirisha; Peters, Mette A; Shin, Joo Heon; Wang, Yifan; Yang, Xiaoxu; Akbarian, Schahram; Chess, Andrew; Gage, Fred H; Gleeson, Joseph G; Kidd, Jeffrey M; McConnell, Michael; Mills, Ryan E; Moran, John V; Park, Peter J; Sestan, Nenad; Urban, Alexander E; Vaccarino, Flora M; Walsh, Christopher A; Weinberger, Daniel R; Wheelan, Sarah J; Abyzov, Alexej; BSMN ConsortiumNovember 20, 2023Not Determined
37644260Create StudyAuthor Correction: The landscape of somatic mutation in cerebral cortex of autistic and neurotypical individuals revealed by ultra-deep whole-genome sequencing.Nature neuroscienceRodin, Rachel E; Dou, Yanmei; Kwon, Minseok; Sherman, Maxwell A; D'Gama, Alissa M; Doan, Ryan N; Rento, Lariza M; Girskis, Kelly M; Bohrson, Craig L; Kim, Sonia N; Nadig, Ajay; Luquette, Lovelace J; Gulhan, Doga C; Brain Somatic Mosaicism Network; Park, Peter J; Walsh, Christopher AOctober 1, 2023Not Determined
37252957Create StudyGlial dysregulation in the human brain in fragile X-associated tremor/ataxia syndrome.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of AmericaDias, Caroline M; Issac, Biju; Sun, Liang; Lukowicz, Abigail; Talukdar, Maya; Akula, Shyam K; Miller, Michael B; Walsh, Katherine; Rockowitz, Shira; Walsh, Christopher AJune 6, 2023Not Determined
36207339Create StudyPrevalence and mechanisms of somatic deletions in single human neurons during normal aging and in DNA repair disorders.Nature communicationsKim, Junho; Huang, August Yue; Johnson, Shelby L; Lai, Jenny; Isacco, Laura; Jeffries, Ailsa M; Miller, Michael B; Lodato, Michael A; Walsh, Christopher A; Lee, Eunjung AliceOctober 7, 2022Not Determined
36163278Create StudySingle-cell genome sequencing of human neurons identifies somatic point mutation and indel enrichment in regulatory elements.Nature geneticsLuquette, Lovelace J; Miller, Michael B; Zhou, Zinan; Bohrson, Craig L; Zhao, Yifan; Jin, Hu; Gulhan, Doga; Ganz, Javier; Bizzotto, Sara; Kirkham, Samantha; Hochepied, Tino; Libert, Claude; Galor, Alon; Kim, Junho; Lodato, Michael A; Garaycoechea, Juan I; Gawad, Charles; West, Jay; Walsh, Christopher A; Park, Peter JOctober 1, 2022Not Determined
35901164Create StudyAnalysis of somatic mutations in 131 human brains reveals aging-associated hypermutability.Science (New York, N.Y.)Bae, Taejeong; Fasching, Liana; Wang, Yifan; Shin, Joo Heon; Suvakov, Milovan; Jang, Yeongjun; Norton, Scott; Dias, Caroline; Mariani, Jessica; Jourdon, Alexandre; Wu, Feinan; Panda, Arijit; Pattni, Reenal; Chahine, Yasmine; Yeh, Rebecca; Roberts, Rosalinda C; Huttner, Anita; Kleinman, Joel E; Hyde, Thomas M; Straub, Richard E; Walsh, Christopher A; Brain Somatic Mosaicism Network§; Urban, Alexander E; Leckman, James F; Weinberger, Daniel R; Vaccarino, Flora M; Abyzov, AlexejJuly 29, 2022Not Determined
34838103Create StudyWhole-genome analysis reveals the contribution of non-coding de novo transposon insertions to autism spectrum disorder.Mobile DNABorges-Monroy, Rebeca; Chu, Chong; Dias, Caroline; Choi, Jaejoon; Lee, Soohyun; Gao, Yue; Shin, Taehwan; Park, Peter J; Walsh, Christopher A; Lee, Eunjung AliceNovember 27, 2021Not Determined
34389641Create StudyRates and Patterns of Clonal Oncogenic Mutations in the Normal Human Brain.Cancer discoveryGanz, Javier; Maury, Eduardo A; Becerra, Basheer; Bizzotto, Sara; Doan, Ryan N; Kenny, Connor J; Shin, Taehwan; Kim, Junho; Zhou, Zinan; Ligon, Keith L; Lee, Eunjung Alice; Walsh, Christopher AJanuary 1, 2022Not Determined
34196990Create StudyApplication of single cell genomics to focal epilepsies: A call to action.Brain pathology (Zurich, Switzerland)Khoshkhoo, Sattar; Lal, Dennis; Walsh, Christopher AJuly 1, 2021Not Determined
34158502Create StudyComprehensive identification of transposable element insertions using multiple sequencing technologies.Nature communicationsChu, Chong; Borges-Monroy, Rebeca; Viswanadham, Vinayak V; Lee, Soohyun; Li, Heng; Lee, Eunjung Alice; Park, Peter JJune 22, 2021Not Determined
34006844Create Study16p11.2 deletion is associated with hyperactivation of human iPSC-derived dopaminergic neuron networks and is rescued by RHOA inhibition in vitro.Nature communicationsSundberg, Maria; Pinson, Hannah; Smith, Richard S; Winden, Kellen D; Venugopal, Pooja; Tai, Derek J C; Gusella, James F; Talkowski, Michael E; Walsh, Christopher A; Tegmark, Max; Sahin, MustafaMay 18, 2021Not Determined
33781308Create StudyComprehensive identification of somatic nucleotide variants in human brain tissue.Genome biologyWang, Yifan; Bae, Taejeong; Thorpe, Jeremy; Sherman, Maxwell A; Jones, Attila G; Cho, Sean; Daily, Kenneth; Dou, Yanmei; Ganz, Javier; Galor, Alon; Lobon, Irene; Pattni, Reenal; Rosenbluh, Chaggai; Tomasi, Simone; Tomasini, Livia; Yang, Xiaoxu; Zhou, Bo; Akbarian, Schahram; Ball, Laurel L; Bizzotto, Sara; Emery, Sarah B; Doan, Ryan; Fasching, Liana; Jang, Yeongjun; Juan, David; Lizano, Esther; Luquette, Lovelace J; Moldovan, John B; Narurkar, Rujuta; Oetjens, Matthew T; Rodin, Rachel E; Sekar, Shobana; Shin, Joo Heon; Soriano, Eduardo; Straub, Richard E; Zhou, Weichen; Chess, Andrew; Gleeson, Joseph G; Marquès-Bonet, Tomas; Park, Peter J; Peters, Mette A; Pevsner, Jonathan; Walsh, Christopher A; Weinberger, Daniel R; Brain Somatic Mosaicism Network; Vaccarino, Flora M; Moran, John V; Urban, Alexander E; Kidd, Jeffrey M; Mills, Ryan E; Abyzov, AlexejMarch 29, 2021Not Determined
33737485Create StudyLandmarks of human embryonic development inscribed in somatic mutations.Science (New York, N.Y.)Bizzotto, Sara; Dou, Yanmei; Ganz, Javier; Doan, Ryan N; Kwon, Minseok; Bohrson, Craig L; Kim, Sonia N; Bae, Taejeong; Abyzov, Alexej; NIMH Brain Somatic Mosaicism Network; Park, Peter J; Walsh, Christopher AMarch 19, 2021Not Determined
33579278Create StudyMIPP-Seq: ultra-sensitive rapid detection and validation of low-frequency mosaic mutations.BMC medical genomicsDoan, Ryan N; Miller, Michael B; Kim, Sonia N; Rodin, Rachel E; Ganz, Javier; Bizzotto, Sara; Morillo, Katherine S; Huang, August Yue; Digumarthy, Reethika; Zemmel, Zachary; Walsh, Christopher AFebruary 12, 2021Not Determined
33444936Create StudySomatic copy number variants in neuropsychiatric disorders.Current opinion in genetics & developmentMaury, Eduardo A; Walsh, Christopher AJune 1, 2021Not Determined
33432196Create StudyMachine learning reveals bilateral distribution of somatic L1 insertions in human neurons and glia.Nature neuroscienceZhu, Xiaowei; Zhou, Bo; Pattni, Reenal; Gleason, Kelly; Tan, Chunfeng; Kalinowski, Agnieszka; Sloan, Steven; Fiston-Lavier, Anna-Sophie; Mariani, Jessica; Petrov, Dmitri; Barres, Ben A; Duncan, Laramie; Abyzov, Alexej; Vogel, Hannes; Brain Somatic Mosaicism Network; Moran, John V; Vaccarino, Flora M; Tamminga, Carol A; Levinson, Douglas F; Urban, Alexander EFebruary 1, 2021Not Determined
33432195Create StudyThe landscape of somatic mutation in cerebral cortex of autistic and neurotypical individuals revealed by ultra-deep whole-genome sequencing.Nature neuroscienceRodin, Rachel E; Dou, Yanmei; Kwon, Minseok; Sherman, Maxwell A; D'Gama, Alissa M; Doan, Ryan N; Rento, Lariza M; Girskis, Kelly M; Bohrson, Craig L; Kim, Sonia N; Nadig, Ajay; Luquette, Lovelace J; Gulhan, Doga C; Brain Somatic Mosaicism Network; Park, Peter J; Walsh, Christopher AFebruary 1, 2021Not Determined
33432194Create StudyLarge mosaic copy number variations confer autism risk.Nature neuroscienceSherman, Maxwell A; Rodin, Rachel E; Genovese, Giulio; Dias, Caroline; Barton, Alison R; Mukamel, Ronen E; Berger, Bonnie; Park, Peter J; Walsh, Christopher A; Loh, Po-RuFebruary 1, 2021Not Determined
33416869Create StudyBamSnap: a lightweight viewer for sequencing reads in BAM files.Bioinformatics (Oxford, England)Kwon, Minseok; Lee, Soohyun; Berselli, Michele; Chu, Chong; Park, Peter JApril 19, 2021Not Determined
33136153Create StudyHiTea: a computational pipeline to identify non-reference transposable element insertions in Hi-C data.Bioinformatics (Oxford, England)Jain, Dhawal; Chu, Chong; Alver, Burak Han; Lee, Soohyun; Lee, Eunjung Alice; Park, Peter JMay 23, 2021Not Determined
32589877Create StudyAn Activity-Mediated Transition in Transcription in Early Postnatal Neurons.NeuronStroud, Hume; Yang, Marty G; Tsitohay, Yael N; Davis, Christopher P; Sherman, Maxwell A; Hrvatin, Sinisa; Ling, Emi; Greenberg, Michael ESeptember 9, 2020Not Determined
32522880Create StudyParallel RNA and DNA analysis after deep sequencing (PRDD-seq) reveals cell type-specific lineage patterns in human brain.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of AmericaHuang, August Yue; Li, Pengpeng; Rodin, Rachel E; Kim, Sonia N; Dou, Yanmei; Kenny, Connor J; Akula, Shyam K; Hodge, Rebecca D; Bakken, Trygve E; Miller, Jeremy A; Lein, Ed S; Park, Peter J; Lee, Eunjung Alice; Walsh, Christopher AJune 2020Not Determined
32396753Create StudyRecent Advances in Understanding the Genetic Architecture of Autism.Annual review of genomics and human geneticsDias, Caroline M; Walsh, Christopher AAugust 31, 2020Not Determined
32103185Create StudyRegulation of human cerebral cortical development by EXOC7 and EXOC8, components of the exocyst complex, and roles in neural progenitor cell proliferation and survival.Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical GeneticsCoulter, Michael E; Musaev, Damir; DeGennaro, Ellen M; Zhang, Xiaochang; Henke, Katrin; James, Kiely N; Smith, Richard S; Hill, R Sean; Partlow, Jennifer N; Muna Al-Saffar; Kamumbu, A Stacy; Hatem, Nicole; Barkovich, A James; Aziza, Jacqueline; Chassaing, Nicolas; Zaki, Maha S; Sultan, Tipu; Burglen, Lydie; Rajab, Anna; Al-Gazali, Lihadh; Mochida, Ganeshwaran H; Harris, Matthew P; Gleeson, Joseph G; Walsh, Christopher AJune 2020Not Determined
31959360Create StudyIon Channel Functions in Early Brain Development.Trends in neurosciencesSmith, Richard S; Walsh, Christopher AFebruary 2020Not Determined
31907404Create StudyAccurate detection of mosaic variants in sequencing data without matched controls.Nature biotechnologyDou, Yanmei; Kwon, Minseok; Rodin, Rachel E; Cortés-Ciriano, Isidro; Doan, Ryan; Luquette, Lovelace J; Galor, Alon; Bohrson, Craig; Walsh, Christopher A; Park, Peter JMarch 2020Not Determined
31578549Create StudyGenome aging: somatic mutation in the brain links age-related decline with disease and nominates pathogenic mechanisms.Human molecular geneticsLodato, Michael A; Walsh, Christopher AOctober 2019Not Determined
31467286Create StudyIdentification of somatic mutations in single cell DNA-seq using a spatial model of allelic imbalance.Nature communicationsLuquette, Lovelace J; Bohrson, Craig L; Sherman, Max A; Park, Peter JAugust 2019Not Determined
30886424Create StudyLinked-read analysis identifies mutations in single-cell DNA-sequencing data.Nature geneticsBohrson, Craig L; Barton, Alison R; Lodato, Michael A; Rodin, Rachel E; Luquette, Lovelace J; Viswanadham, Vinay V; Gulhan, Doga C; Cortés-Ciriano, Isidro; Sherman, Maxwell A; Kwon, Minseok; Coulter, Michael E; Galor, Alon; Walsh, Christopher A; Park, Peter JApril 2019Not Determined
30349109Create StudySomatic mosaicism and neurodevelopmental disease.Nature neuroscienceD'Gama, Alissa M; Walsh, Christopher ANovember 1, 2018Not Determined
30249355Create StudySomatic Mutation in Pediatric Neurological Diseases.Pediatric neurologyRodin, Rachel E; Walsh, Christopher AOctober 2018Not Determined
30152010Create StudyRainer W. Guillery and the genetic analysis of brain development.The European journal of neuroscienceWalsh, Christopher AApril 2019Not Determined
29731376Create StudyDetecting Somatic Mutations in Normal Cells.Trends in genetics : TIGDou, Yanmei; Gold, Heather D; Luquette, Lovelace J; Park, Peter JJuly 2018Not Determined
29281825Create StudySomatic Mutations Activating the mTOR Pathway in Dorsal Telencephalic Progenitors Cause a Continuum of Cortical Dysplasias.Cell reportsD'Gama, Alissa M; Woodworth, Mollie B; Hossain, Amer A; Bizzotto, Sara; Hatem, Nicole E; LaCoursiere, Christopher M; Najm, Imad; Ying, Zhong; Yang, Edward; Barkovich, A James; Kwiatkowski, David J; Vinters, Harry V; Madsen, Joseph R; Mathern, Gary W; Blümcke, Ingmar; Poduri, Annapurna; Walsh, Christopher ADecember 2017Not Determined
29217584Create StudyAging and neurodegeneration are associated with increased mutations in single human neurons.Science (New York, N.Y.)Lodato, Michael A; Rodin, Rachel E; Bohrson, Craig L; Coulter, Michael E; Barton, Alison R; Kwon, Minseok; Sherman, Maxwell A; Vitzthum, Carl M; Luquette, Lovelace J; Yandava, Chandri N; Yang, Pengwei; Chittenden, Thomas W; Hatem, Nicole E; Ryu, Steven C; Woodworth, Mollie B; Park, Peter J; Walsh, Christopher AFebruary 2018Not Determined
29186545Create StudyPaSD-qc: quality control for single cell whole-genome sequencing data using power spectral density estimation.Nucleic acids researchSherman MA, Barton AR, Lodato MA, Vitzthum C, Coulter ME, Walsh CA, Park PJFebruary 2018Not Determined
28714951Create StudyRates, distribution and implications of postzygotic mosaic mutations in autism spectrum disorder.Nature neuroscienceLim, Elaine T; Uddin, Mohammed; De Rubeis, Silvia; Chan, Yingleong; Kamumbu, Anne S; Zhang, Xiaochang; D'Gama, Alissa M; Kim, Sonia N; Hill, Robert Sean; Goldberg, Arthur P; Poultney, Christopher; Minshew, Nancy J; Kushima, Itaru; Aleksic, Branko; Ozaki, Norio; Parellada, Mara; Arango, Celso; Penzol, Maria J; Carracedo, Angel; Kolevzon, Alexander; Hultman, Christina M; Weiss, Lauren A; Fromer, Menachem; Chiocchetti, Andreas G; Freitag, Christine M; Autism Sequencing Consortium; Church, George M; Scherer, Stephen W; Buxbaum, Joseph D; Walsh, Christopher ASeptember 2017Not Determined
28450582Create StudyIntersection of diverse neuronal genomes and neuropsychiatric disease: The Brain Somatic Mosaicism Network.Science (New York, N.Y.)McConnell, Michael J; Moran, John V; Abyzov, Alexej; Akbarian, Schahram; Bae, Taejeong; Cortes-Ciriano, Isidro; Erwin, Jennifer A; Fasching, Liana; Flasch, Diane A; Freed, Donald; Ganz, Javier; Jaffe, Andrew E; Kwan, Kenneth Y; Kwon, Minseok; Lodato, Michael A; Mills, Ryan E; Paquola, Apua C M; Rodin, Rachel E; Rosenbluh, Chaggai; Sestan, Nenad; Sherman, Maxwell A; Shin, Joo Heon; Song, Saera; Straub, Richard E; Thorpe, Jeremy; Weinberger, Daniel R; Urban, Alexander E; Zhou, Bo; Gage, Fred H; Lehner, Thomas; Senthil, Geetha; Walsh, Christopher A; Chess, Andrew; Courchesne, Eric; Gleeson, Joseph G; Kidd, Jeffrey M; Park, Peter J; Pevsner, Jonathan; Vaccarino, Flora M; Brain Somatic Mosaicism NetworkApril 2017Not Determined
28111472Create StudyBuilding a lineage from single cells: genetic techniques for cell lineage tracking.Nature reviews. GeneticsWoodworth, Mollie B; Girskis, Kelly M; Walsh, Christopher AApril 2017Not Determined
27788131Create StudyThe Impact of Environmental and Endogenous Damage on Somatic Mutation Load in Human Skin Fibroblasts.PLoS geneticsSaini, Natalie; Roberts, Steven A; Klimczak, Leszek J; Chan, Kin; Grimm, Sara A; Dai, Shuangshuang; Fargo, David C; Boyer, Jayne C; Kaufmann, William K; Taylor, Jack A; Lee, Eunjung; Cortes-Ciriano, Isidro; Park, Peter J; Schurman, Shepherd H; Malc, Ewa P; Mieczkowski, Piotr A; Gordenin, Dmitry AOctober 1, 2016Not Determined
26637798Create StudyTargeted DNA Sequencing from Autism Spectrum Disorder Brains Implicates Multiple Genetic Mechanisms.NeuronD'Gama, Alissa M; Pochareddy, Sirisha; Li, Mingfeng; Jamuar, Saumya S; Reiff, Rachel E; Lam, Anh-Thu N; Sestan, Nenad; Walsh, Christopher ADecember 2015Not Determined
26430121Create StudySomatic mutation in single human neurons tracks developmental and transcriptional history.Science (New York, N.Y.)Lodato, Michael A; Woodworth, Mollie B; Lee, Semin; Evrony, Gilad D; Mehta, Bhaven K; Karger, Amir; Lee, Soohyun; Chittenden, Thomas W; D'Gama, Alissa M; Cai, Xuyu; Luquette, Lovelace J; Lee, Eunjung; Park, Peter J; Walsh, Christopher AOctober 2015Not Determined
helpcenter.collection.publications-tab

NDA Help Center

Collection - Publications

The number of Publications is displayed in parentheses next to the tab name. Clicking on any of the Publication Titles will open the Publication in a new internet browsing tab.

Collection Owners, Program Officers, and users with Submission or Administrative Privileges for the Collection may mark a publication as either Relevant or Not Relevant in the Status column.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • How can I determine if a publication is relevant?
    Publications are considered relevant to a collection when the data shared is directly related to the project or collection.
  • Where does the NDA get the publications?
    PubMed, an online library containing journals, articles, and medical research. Sponsored by NiH and National Library of Medicine (NLM).

Glossary

  • Create Study
    A link to the Create an NDA Study page that can be clicked to start creating an NDA Study with information such as the title, journal and authors automatically populated.
  • Not Determined Publication
    Indicates that the publication has not yet been reviewed and/or marked as Relevant or Not Relevant so it has not been determined whether an NDA Study is expected.
  • Not Relevant Publication
    A publication that is not based on data related to the aims of the grant/project associated with the Collection or not based on any data such as a review article and, therefore, an NDA Study is not expected to be created.
  • PubMed
    PubMed provides citation information for biomedical and life sciences publications and is managed by the U.S. National Institutes of Health's National Library of Medicine.
  • PubMed ID
    The PUBMed ID is the unique ID number for the publication as recorded in the PubMed database.
  • Relevant Publication
    A publication that is based on data related to the aims of the grant/project associated with the Collection and, therefore, an NDA Study is expected to be created.
Data Expected List: Mandatory Data Structures

These data structures are mandatory for your NDA Collection. Please update the Targeted Enrollment number to accurately represent the number of subjects you expect to submit for the entire study.

For NIMH HIV-related research that involves human research participants: Select the dictionary or dictionaries most appropriate for your research. If your research does not require all three data dictionaries, just ignore the ones you do not need. There is no need to delete extra data dictionaries from your NDA Collection. You can adjust the Targeted Enrollment column in the Data Expected tab to “0” for those unnecessary data dictionaries. At least one of the three data dictionaries must have a non-zero value.

Data ExpectedTargeted EnrollmentInitial SubmissionSubjects SharedStatus
Research Subject and Pedigree info icon
101/15/2019
79
Approved
To create your project's Data Expected list, use the "+New Data Expected" to add or request existing structures and to request new Data Structures that are not in the NDA Data Dictionary.

If the Structure you need already exists, locate it and specify your dates and enrollment when adding it to your Data Expected list. If you require changes to the Structure you need, select the indicator stating "No, it requires changes to meet research needs," and upload a file containing your requested changes.

If the structure you need is not yet defined in the Data Dictionary, you can select "Upload Definition" and attach the necessary materials to request its creation.

When selecting the expected dates for your data, make sure to follow the standard Data Sharing Regimen and choose dates within the date ranges that correspond to your project start and end dates.

Please visit the Completing Your Data Expected Tutorial for more information.
Data Expected List: Data Structures per Research Aims

These data structures are specific to your research aims and should list all data structures in which data will be collected and submitted for this NDA Collection. Please update the Targeted Enrollment number to accurately represent the number of subjects you expect to submit for the entire study.

Data ExpectedTargeted EnrollmentInitial SubmissionSubjects SharedStatus
Genomics/omics info icon
6501/15/2019
79
Approved
Summary info icon
801/15/2019
19
Approved
Structure not yet defined
No Status history for this Data Expected has been recorded yet
helpcenter.collection.data-expected-tab

NDA Help Center

Collection - Data Expected

The Data Expected tab displays the list of all data that NDA expects to receive in association with the Collection as defined by the contributing researcher, as well as the dates for the expected initial upload of the data, and when it is first expected to be shared, or with the research community. Above the primary table of Data Expected, any publications determined to be relevant to the data within the Collection are also displayed - members of the contributing research group can use these to define NDA Studies, connecting those papers to underlying data in NDA.

The tab is used both as a reference for those accessing shared data, providing information on what is expected and when it will be shared, and as the primary tracking mechanism for contributing projects. It is used by both contributing primary researchers, secondary researchers, and NIH Program and Grants Management staff.

Researchers who are starting their project need to update their Data Expected list to include all the Data Structures they are collecting under their grant and set their initial submission and sharing schedule according to the NDA Data Sharing Regimen.

To add existing Data Structures from the Data Dictionary, to request new Data Structure that are not in the Dictionary, or to request changes to existing Data Structures, click "+New Data Expected".

For step-by-step instructions on how to add existing Data Structures, request changes to an existing Structure, or request a new Data Structure, please visit the Completing Your Data Expected Tutorial.

If you are a contributing researcher creating this list for the first time, or making changes to the list as your project progress, please note the following:

  • Although items you add to the list and changes you make are displayed, they are not committed to the system until you Save the entire page using the "Save" button at the bottom of your screen. Please Save after every change to ensure none of your work is lost.
  • If you attempt to add a new structure, the title you provide must be unique - if another structure exists with the same name your change will fail.
  • Adding a new structure to this list is the only way to request the creation of a new Data Dictionary definition.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • What is an NDA Data Structure?
    An NDA Data Structure is comprised of multiple Data Elements to make up an electronic definition of an assessment, measure, questionnaire, etc will have a corresponding Data Structure.
  • What is the NDA Data Dictionary?
    The NDA Data Dictionary is comprised of electronic definitions known as Data Structures.

Glossary

  • Analyzed Data
    Data specific to the primary aims of the research being conducted (e.g. outcome measures, other dependent variables, observations, laboratory results, analyzed images, volumetric data, etc.) including processed images.
  • Data Item
    Items listed on the Data Expected list in the Collection which may be an individual and discrete Data Structure, Data Structure Category, or Data Structure Group.
  • Data Structure
    A defined organization and group of Data Elements to represent an electronic definition of a measure, assessment, questionnaire, or collection of data points. Data structures that have been defined in the NDA Data Dictionary are available at https://nda.nih.gov/general-query.html?q=query=data-structure
  • Data Structure Category
    An NDA term describing the affiliation of a Data Structure to a Category, which may be disease/disorder or diagnosis related (Depression, ADHD, Psychosis), specific to data type (MRI, eye tracking, omics), or type of data (physical exam, IQ).
  • Data Structure Group
    A Data Item listed on the Data Expected tab of a Collection that indicates a group of Data Structures (e.g., ADOS or SCID) for which data may be submitted instead of a specific Data Structure identified by version, module, edition, etc. For example, the ADOS Data Structure Category includes every ADOS Data Structure such as ADOS Module 1, ADOS Module 2, ADOS Module 1 - 2nd Edition, etc. The SCID Data Structure Group includes every SCID Data Structure such as SCID Mania, SCID V Mania, SCID PTSD, SCID-V Diagnosis, and more.
  • Evaluated Data
    A new Data Structure category, Evaluated Data is analyzed data resulting from the use of computational pipelines in the Cloud and can be uploaded directly back to a miNDAR database. Evaluated Data is expected to be listed as a Data Item in the Collection's Data Expected Tab.
  • Imaging Data
    Imaging+ is an NDA term which encompasses all imaging related data including, but not limited to, images (DTI, MRI, PET, Structural, Spectroscopy, etc.) as well as neurosignal data (EEG, fMRI, MEG, EGG, eye tracking, etc.) and Evaluated Data.
  • Initial Share Date
    Initial Submission and Initial Share dates should be populated according to the NDA Data Sharing Terms and Conditions. Any modifications to these will go through the approval processes outlined above. Data will be shared with authorized users upon publication (via an NDA Study) or 1-2 years after the grant end date specified on the first Notice of Award, as defined in the applicable Data Sharing Terms and Conditions.
  • Initial Submission Date
    Initial Submission and Initial Share dates should be populated according to these NDA Data Sharing Terms and Conditions. Any modifications to these will go through the approval processes outlined above. Data for all subjects is not expected on the Initial Submission Date and modifications may be made as necessary based on the project's conduct.
  • Research Subject and Pedigree
    An NDA created Data Structure used to convey basic information about the subject such as demographics, pedigree (links family GUIDs), diagnosis/phenotype, and sample location that are critical to allow for easier querying of shared data.
  • Submission Cycle
    The NDA has two Submission Cycles per year - January 15 and July 15.
  • Submission Exemption
    An interface to notify NDA that data may not be submitted during the upcoming/current submission cycle.

Collection Owners and those with Collection Administrator permission, may edit a collection. The following is currently available for Edit on this page:

Associated Studies

Studies that have been defined using data from a Collection are important criteria to determine the value of data shared. The number of subjects column displays the counts from this Collection that are included in a Study, out of the total number of subjects in that study. The Data Use column represents whether or not the study is a primary analysis of the data or a secondary analysis. State indicates whether the study is private or shared with the research community.

Study NameAbstractCollection/Study SubjectsData UsageState
BSMN Comprehensive Data CollectionSomatic mosaicism is defined as an occurrence of two or more populations of cells having genomic sequences differing at given loci in an individual who is derived from a single zygote. It is a characteristic of multicellular organisms that plays a crucial role in normal development and disease. To study the nature and extent of somatic mosaicism in autism spectrum disorder, bipolar disorder, focal cortical dysplasia, schizophrenia, and Tourette syndrome, a multi-institutional consortium called the Brain Somatic Mosaicism Network (BSMN) was formed through the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH). In addition to genomic data of affected and neurotypical brains, the BSMN also developed and validated a best practices somatic single nucleotide variant calling workflow through the analysis of reference brain tissue. These resources, including >400 terabytes of data from over 1150 individuals, are now available to the research community NIMH Data Archive (NDA) and are described here.79/1087Secondary AnalysisShared
BSMN - Commonly Processed DataSomatic mutations may have causative roles in many diseases and contribute to neuropsychiatric disorders. Here, we conducted whole genome sequencing of 276 human brains, exome sequencing of 390 brains, and whole genome sequencing of 16 PTA (i.e., by primary-template directed) amplified single cells from one brain. The study included neurotipical brains as wells as brains with Tourette Syndrome, Schizophrenia, and Autism Spectrum Disorder. When using this data please acknowledge that the data was produced by the Brain Somatic Mosaicism Network (BSMN) and cite the marker paper using DOI:10.1126/science.aal1641. BSMN portal https://bsmn.synapse.org75/688Primary AnalysisShared
The Landscape of Somatic Mutation in Human Cerebral CortexAlthough roles of somatic mutations-- acquired post-fertilization and present in only a subset of an individual’s cells1-- in cancer and certain focal epilepsies are well established2, the extent to which such mutations shape the normally developing human brain or affect risk of neuropsychiatric disease is poorly understood3,4. Here we characterize the landscape of developmental somatic mutations in the human brain by identifying those somatic mutations present in ≥2-3% of cells using ultra-deep (~250X) whole-genome sequencing (WGS) of DNA isolated from the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (PFC) of 60 postmortem brains of individuals with a diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder (ASD)—the largest such collection ever assembled—as well as 15 neurotypical brains. We identify on average 15 ± 7 somatic single nucleotide variants (sSNVs) per brain (range 3–34), detectable at mosaic fractions (percentage of mutant cells) of 4–83% (mean 18%). Our data reveal that ~5 sSNVs occur in the 1st cell generation after fertilization and ~3 sSNVs occur in each of the 2nd-4th generations, with enrichment of C>T substitutions indicating evolving mutational mechanisms during early development. This mutation rate suggests that a typical individual possesses ~100 mosaic mutations present in ≥2% of cells, and the majority of individuals possess a function-altering sSNV present in ≥2% of cells somewhere in the cortex, levels associated with focal disease. Exons and open chromatin are relatively enriched for mutations, while sSNVs in active, brain-specific enhancers are more common in ASD cases than controls. This suggests that mosaic enhancer mutations contribute to ASD risk and reveals a mechanism of how transcriptional effects in the brain may occur without necessarily impairing non-CNS gene function. The high rate of damaging sSNV in humans suggests they are a routine feature of normal development, and deserve further exploration in other complex neuropsychiatric diseases.79/79Primary AnalysisShared
* Data not on individual level
helpcenter.collection.associated-studies-tab

NDA Help Center

Collection - Associated Studies

Clicking on the Study Title will open the study details in a new internet browser tab. The Abstract is available for viewing, providing the background explanation of the study, as provided by the Collection Owner.

Primary v. Secondary Analysis: The Data Usage column will have one of these two choices. An associated study that is listed as being used for Primary Analysis indicates at least some and potentially all of the data used was originally collected by the creator of the NDA Study. Secondary Analysis indicates the Study owner was not involved in the collection of data, and may be used as supporting data.

Private v. Shared State: Studies that remain private indicate the associated study is only available to users who are able to access the collection. A shared study is accessible to the general public.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • How do I associate a study to my collection?
    Studies are associated to the Collection automatically when the data is defined in the Study.

Glossary

  • Associated Studies Tab
    A tab in a Collection that lists the NDA Studies that have been created using data from that Collection including both Primary and Secondary Analysis NDA Studies.
Edit