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HOMER (Hypergeometric Optimization of Motif EnRichment) is
a suite of tools for Motif Discovery and next-gen sequencing
analysis. It is a collection of command line programs
for unix-style operating systems written in Perl and C++.
HOMER was primarily written as a de novo motif discovery algorithm and is
well suited for finding 8-20 bp motifs in large scale
genomics data. HOMER contains many useful tools for
analyzing ChIP-Seq, GRO-Seq, RNA-Seq, DNase-Seq, Hi-C and
numerous other types of functional genomics sequencing data
sets.
News
(8-25-2014)
Many upgrades and bug-fixes. Fixed
issues with strand specific read counting
and sizing issues with
annotatePeaks.pl. Updates to
accession numbers and GTF parsing too.
(3-29-2014) New version v4.6. Better super
enhancer code, plus lots of other minor
upgrades.
(1-27-2014) New version v4.5 with updated
genome packages too - Last version did not
correctly assign priority assignments in
annotations (i.e. TSS > exons >
introns > intergenic was not honored in
last version - fixed now). Problems
with some of the update scripts too.
Website updates are ongoing.
(1-23-2014) Updated All Organism Packages to v1.1
- latest packages lacked the org2gene.tsv
file (i.e. human2gene.tsv). Users that
updated from the older version of HOMER probably
didn't notice since the old files would have still
been there - new users probably got an error.
(1-15-2014) Welcome to homer.salk.edu - new host for
HOMER!
(1-15-2014) Lots of new documentation. More new
documentation will probably be added to the site over
the next week or so, and new PDF's will be created
once that gets in good shape.
(1-14-2014) New version v4.4. New version with changes
to configuration to help separate the code and data,
update scripts to keep annotation/accessions
up-to-date and incorporate custom
genomes/organisms. As always, lots of new
features and bug fixes. It's very likely a new
version will be posted soon to smooth out any
details. Major changes to note:
- Major Updates to annotations and custom
configuration - easier to add your own genome or
annotation
- bedGraphs and coverage histrograms are now
normalized for fragment length (this is a GOOD
upgrade, be careful comparing to old results)
Old News
Program Download
Download
Page - Get the latest version of HOMER
Supported
Organisms: Human (hg17, hg18, hg19),
Mouse (mm8, mm9, mm10), Rat (rn4, rn5), Frog
(xenTro2, xenTro3), Zebrafish (danRer7),
Drosophila (dm3), C elegans (ce6, ce10), S.
cerevisiae (sacCer2, sacCer3), pombe (ASM294v1),
Arabidopsis (tair10), Rice (msu6), and also works
with custom genomes in FASTA format and gene
annotations in GTF format.
Using HOMER
Introduction to
HOMER
Duff-sponsored Tutorials
HOMER
Hi-C Analysis Tutorial [PDF-old]
Description of routines for analysis of Hi-C
data to study genome conformation and structure.
Doughnut Documentation
Primary Data Download
HOMER Known Motifs - Genome-wide predictions and UCSC
Track
These tracks display motif
positions genome-wide for human and mouse. They
are based on HOMER-motifs, and certainly miss many
"weak" binding sites and incorrectly predict
others. However, the preictions can still serve as
a useful guide to where factors are likely to bind (if
they're expressed in the system you're studying).
Mouse
mm9 UCSC BigBed Track (load as a custom track) - [ primary
BED file]
Human
hg19 UCSC BigBed Track (load as a custom track) -
[ primary
BED file]
Data included in HOMER that may be useful for other
purposes
UCSC Visualization files (Updated for errors in UCSC
processing 08/31/10)
ChIP-Seq
from the Glass, Murre, and Katzenellenbogen Labs
Credits
HOMER was developed
primarily by Chris Benner, with significant contributions
and suggestions by Sven Heinz, Kasey Hutt, Yin Lin, Gene
Hsiao, Fernando Alcalde, Josh Stender, Amy Sullivan,
Nathan Spann, Ivan Garcia-Bassets, Michael Lam, Michael
Rehli, and many others. Initial supervision for the
project was provided by Professors Christopher K. Glass
and Shankar Subramaniam.
Development of HOMER is carried out in the Integrative Genomics and
Bioinformatics Core at the Salk Institute.
HOMER was initially developed in the Glass
Lab at UCSD.
For now, if you use HOMER in your research, please cite
the following paper:
Heinz
S, Benner C, Spann N, Bertolino E et al. Simple Combinations of
Lineage-Determining Transcription Factors Prime
cis-Regulatory Elements Required for Macrophage and B
Cell Identities. Mol Cell
2010 May 28;38(4):576-589. PMID: 20513432
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