174335dd9f478a729210e2fd7debddfae82e75dc abenetpa Mon Jul 27 15:19:06 2020 -0700 corrected long variant cutt off in the long track name and description page, no redmine diff --git src/hg/makeDb/trackDb/human/lovdComp.html src/hg/makeDb/trackDb/human/lovdComp.html index aaf7918..d0afe64 100644 --- src/hg/makeDb/trackDb/human/lovdComp.html +++ src/hg/makeDb/trackDb/human/lovdComp.html @@ -23,31 +23,31 @@ <p> This track shows the genomic positions of all <b>public</b> entries in public installations of the Leiden Open Variation Database system (<a href="http://www.lovd.nl/3.0/home" target="_blank">LOVD</a>) and the effect of the variant, if annotated. Due to the copyright restrictions of the LOVD databases, UCSC is not allowed to host any further information. To get details on a variant (bibliographic reference, phenotype, disease, patient, etc.), follow the "Link to LOVD" to the central server at Leiden, which will then redirect you to the details page on the particular LOVD server reporting this variant. </p> <p> Since Apr 2020, similar to the ClinVar track, the data is split into two subtracks, for variants -with a length of < 50bp and >=100bp, respectively. +with a length of < 50bp and >= 50bp, respectively. </p> <p> LOVD is a flexible, freely-available tool for gene-centered collection and display of DNA variations. It is not a database itself, but rather a platform where curators store and analyze data. While the LOVD team and the biggest LOVD sites are run at the Leiden University Medical Center, LOVD installations and their curators are spread over the whole world. Most LOVD databases report at least some of their content back to Leiden to allow global cross-database search, which is, among others, exported to this UCSC Genome Browser track every month. </p> <p> A few LOVD databases are entirely missing from this track. Reasons include configuration issues and intentionally blocked data search. During the last check in November 2019, the following databases did not export any variants: