MyVariant.info documentation

Introduction

myvariant.info

MyVariant.info provides simple-to-use REST web services to query/retrieve variant annotation data. It’s designed with an emphasis on simplicity and performance.

Quick start

MyVariant.info provides two simple web services: one for variant queries and the other for variant annotation retrieval. Both return results in JSON format.

Variant query service

URL

http://myvariant.info/v1/query

Examples

http://myvariant.info/v1/query?q=rs58991260
http://myvariant.info/v1/query?q=chr1:69000-70000
http://myvariant.info/v1/query?q=dbsnp.vartype:snp
http://myvariant.info/v1/query?q=_exists_:dbsnp  AND NOT dbsnp.vartype:indel
http://myvariant.info/v1/query?q=dbnsfp.polyphen2.hdiv.score:>0.99 AND chrom:1
http://myvariant.info/v1/query?q=cadd.gene.gene_id:ENSG00000113368&facets=cadd.polyphen.cat&size=0
http://myvariant.info/v1/query?q=_exists_:dbsnp AND _exists_:cosmic

Hint

View nicely formatted JSON result in your browser with this handy add-on: JSON formatter for Chrome or JSONView for Firefox.

To learn more

Variant annotation service

URL

http://myvariant.info/v1/variant/<variant_id>

<variant_id>” is an HGVS name based variant id using genomic location based on hg19 human genome assembly..

Examples

http://myvariant.info/v1/variant/chr1:g.35367G>A
http://myvariant.info/v1/variant/chr7:g.55241707G>T
http://myvariant.info/v1/variant/chr9:g.107620835G>A
http://myvariant.info/v1/variant/chr1:g.160145907G>T
http://myvariant.info/v1/variant/chr16:g.28883241A>G
http://myvariant.info/v1/variant/chr3:g.49721532G>A

To learn more

Documentation

Variant annotation data

Data sources

We currently obtain variant annotation data from several data resources and keep them up-to-date, so that you don’t have to do it:

* key name: this is the key for the specific annotation data in a variant object.

The most updated information can be accessed here for hg19 and here for hg38.

Note

Each data source may have its own usage restrictions (e.g. CADD data are free for non-commercial use only). Please refer to the data source pages above for their specific restrictions.

Variant object

Variant annotation data are both stored and returned as a variant object, which is essentially a collection of fields (attributes) and their values:

{
  "_id": "chr1:g.35367G>A",
  "_version": 2,
  "cadd": {
    "alt": "A",
    "annotype": "NonCodingTranscript",
    "chrom": 1,
    "gene": {
      "cds": {
        "cdna_pos": 476,
        "rel_cdna_pos": 0.4
      },
      "feature_id": "ENST00000417324",
      "gene_id": "ENSG00000237613",
    },
    "ref": "G",
    "type": "SNV"
  },
  "dbnsfp": {
    "aa": {
      "aapos_sift": "ENSP00000409362:P44L",
      "alt": "L",
      "codonpos": 2,
      "pos": 44,
      "ref": "P",
      "refcodon": "CCG"
    },
    "alt": "A",
    "ancestral_allele": "G",
    "chrom": "1",
    "ensembl": {
      "geneid": "ENSG00000237613",
      "transcriptid": "ENST00000417324"
    },
    "genename": "FAM138A",
    "hg19": {
      "end": 35367,
      "start": 35367
    }
  }
}

The example above omits many of the available fields. For a full example, check out this example variant, or try the interactive API page.

_id field

Each individual variant object contains an “_id” field as the primary key. We utilize the recommended nomenclature from Human Genome Variation Society to define the “_id” field in MyVariant.info. Specifically, we use HGVS’s genomic reference sequence notation based on the current reference genome assembly (e.g. hg19 for human). The followings are brief representations of major types of genetic variants. More examples could be found at HVGS recommendations for the description of DNA sequence variants page.

Note

The default reference genome assembly is always human hg19 in MyVariant.info, so we only use “chr??” to represent the reference genomic sequence in “_id” field. The valid chromosomes representations are chr1, chr2, …, chr22, chrX, chrY and chrMT. Do not use chr23 for chrX, chr24 for chrY, or chrM for chrMT.

  • SNV example:

    chr1:g.35366C>T
    

    The above _id represents a C to T SNV on chromosome 1, genomic position 35366.

  • Insertion example:

    chr2:g.17142_17143insA
    

    The above _id represents that an A is inserted between genomic position 17142 and 17143 on chromosome 2.

  • Deletion example:

    chrMT:g.8271_8279del
    

    The above _id represents that a nine nucleotides deletion between genomic position 8271 and 8279 on chromosome MT. Note that we don’t include the deleted sequence in the _id field in this case.

  • Deletion/Insertion example:

    chrX:g.14112_14117delinsTG
    

    The above _id represents that six nucleotides between genomic position 14112 and 14117 are replaced by TG.

_score field

You will often see a “_score” field in the returned variant object, which is the internal score representing how well the query matches the returned variant object. It probably does not mean much in variant annotation service when only one variant object is returned. In variant query service, by default, the returned variant hits are sorted by the scores in descending order.

_version field

Sometime, you will see a “_version” field in the returned variant object, e.g. from the v1/variant endpoint. This field is basically for our internal information purpose, not very useful to the end users. You can just ignore it.

But for those who are curious, here is the explanation. The value of this “_version” field can be a small integer like 1, 2, 5 etc. The number indicates the version history of this particular variant object (i.e. how many times this object was updated). Because each variant object is updated independently and incrementally only when the updates to that particular variant are available, the “_version” values differ across variant objects. Of course, from time to time, when we need to make a full-data release (with some huge updates), every variant object will be re-created and their “_version” values will all be reset to 1.

Please also note that we don’t keep any older versions of a variant object, the one returned from the API request is always the latest one we have. The “_version” field just indicates how many times it was updated in the past (since our last full data release).

Available fields

The table below lists all of the possible fields that could be in a variant object, as well as all of their parents (for nested fields). If the field is indexed, it may also be directly queried, e.g.

q=dbnsfp.polyphen2.hdiv.score:>0.99

All fields can be used with _exists_ or _missing_ filters, e.g.

q=_exists_:dbsnp AND _exists_:cosmic
q=_missing_:wellderly

or as inputs to the fields parameter, e.g.

q=_exists_:dbsnp&fields=dbsnp.rsid,dbsnp.vartype
Field Type Searched by default hg19 hg38 Notes

Data release notes

This page contains metadata about each MyVariant.info data release. Click a link to see more.

MyVariant Releases

Loading release data . . .

Variant query service

This page describes the reference for MyVariant.info variant query web service. It’s also recommended to try it live on our interactive API page.

Service endpoint

http://myvariant.info/v1/query

GET request

Query parameters
q
Required, passing user query. The detailed query syntax for parameter “q” we explained below.
fields
Optional, a comma-separated string to limit the fields returned from the matching variant hits. The supported field names can be found from any variant object (e.g. here). Note that it supports dot notation, and wildcards as well, e.g., you can pass “dbnsfp”, “dbnsfp.genename”, or “dbnsfp.aa.*”. If “fields=all”, all available fields will be returned. Default: “all”.
size
Optional, the maximum number of matching variant hits to return (with a cap of 1000 at the moment). Default: 10.
from
Optional, the number of matching variant hits to skip, starting from 0. Default: 0

Hint

The combination of “size” and “from” parameters can be used to get paging for large query:

q=cdk*&size=50                     first 50 hits
q=cdk*&size=50&from=50             the next 50 hits
fetch_all
Optional, a boolean, which when TRUE, allows fast retrieval of all unsorted query hits. The return object contains a _scroll_id field, which when passed as a parameter to the query endpoint, returns the next 1000 query results. Setting fetch_all = TRUE causes the results to be inherently unsorted, therefore the sort parameter is ignored. For more information see examples using fetch_all here. Default: FALSE.
scroll_id
Optional, a string containing the _scroll_id returned from a query request with fetch_all = TRUE. Supplying a valid scroll_id will return the next 1000 unordered results. If the next results are not obtained within 1 minute of the previous set of results, the scroll_id becomes stale, and a new one must be obtained with another query request with fetch_all = TRUE. All other parameters are ignored when the scroll_id parameter is supplied. For more information see examples using scroll_id here.
sort
Optional, the comma-separated fields to sort on. Prefix with “-” for descending order, otherwise in ascending order. Default: sort by matching scores in descending order.
facets
Optional, a single field or comma-separated fields to return facets, for example, “facets=cadd”, “facets=cadd,dbsnp.vartype”. See examples of faceted queries here.
facet_size
Optional, an integer (1 <= facet_size <= 1000) that specifies how many buckets to return in a faceted query.
callback
Optional, you can pass a “callback” parameter to make a JSONP call.
dotfield
Optional, can be used to control the format of the returned variant object. If “dotfield” is true, the returned data object is returned flattened (no nested objects) using dotfield notation for key names. Default: false.
email
Optional, if you are regular users of our services, we encourage you to provide us an email, so that we can better track the usage or follow up with you.
Query syntax

Examples of query parameter “q”:

Simple queries

search for everything:

q=rs58991260                        # search for rsid
Fielded queries
q=chr1:69000-70000                        # for a genomic range
q=dbsnp.vartype:snp                       # for matching value on a specific field

q=dbnsfp.polyphen2.hdiv.pred:(D P)        # multiple values for a field
q=dbnsfp.polyphen2.hdiv.pred:(D OR P)     # multiple values for a field using OR

q=_exists_:dbsnp                          # having dbsnp field
q=_missing_:exac                          # missing exac field

Hint

For a list of available fields, see here.

Range queries
q=dbnsfp.polyphen2.hdiv.score:>0.99
q=dbnsfp.polyphen2.hdiv.score:>=0.99
q=exac.af:<0.00001
q=exac.af:<=0.00001

q=exac.ac.ac_adj:[76640 TO 80000]        # bounded (including 76640 and 80000)
q=exac.ac.ac_adj:{76640 TO 80000}        # unbounded
Wildcard queries

Wildcard character “*” or “?” is supported in either simple queries or fielded queries:

q=dbnsfp.genename:CDK?
q=dbnsfp.genename:CDK*

Note

Wildcard character can not be the first character. It will be ignored.

Scrolling queries

If you want to return ALL results of a very large query, sometimes the paging method described above can take too long. In these cases, you can use a scrolling query. This is a two-step process that turns off database sorting to allow very fast retrieval of all query results. To begin a scrolling query, you first call the query endpoint as you normally would, but with an extra parameter fetch_all = TRUE. For example, a GET request to:

http://myvariant.info/v1/query?q=cadd.phred:>50&fetch_all=TRUE

Returns the following object:

{
  "_scroll_id": "c2NhbjsxMDs5MjQ2OTc2Ok5nM0d0czYzUlcyU0dUU1dFemo5Mmc7MTE1NTgyNjA6RV9La1c5WklSQy16cVFuRXFzcEV3dzs5MjQ2ODc0Ok5uQkVpaEg5Uk9pYjA4ZVQ3RVh5TWc7OTI0Njg3MTpObkJFaWhIOVJPaWIwOGVUN0VYeU1nOzkyNDY4NzI6Tm5CRWloSDlST2liMDhlVDdFWHlNZzs5MjQ3Mjc3OjRNV2NtY1A5VFdPLUotSmM4a0w1Z0E7OTI0Njk3NzpOZzNHdHM2M1JXMlNHVFNXRXpqOTJnOzkyNDY4NzM6Tm5CRWloSDlST2liMDhlVDdFWHlNZzs5MjQ3MDgxOjE3MEZxVWRXU3BTdC1DMmdYeHdHNXc7MTE1NTgyNTk6RV9La1c5WklSQy16cVFuRXFzcEV3dzsxO3RvdGFsX2hpdHM6NTg3NTk7",
  "hits": [
    .
    .
    .
  ],
  "max_score": 0.0,
  "took": 84,
  "total": 58759
}

At this point, the first 1000 hits have been returned (of ~58,000 total), and a scroll has been set up for your query. To get the next batch of 1000 unordered results, simply execute a GET request to the following address, supplying the _scroll_id from the first step into the scroll_id parameter in the second step:

http://myvariant.info/v1/query?scroll_id=c2NhbjsxMDsxMTU1NjY5MTpxSnFkTFdVQlJ6T1dRVzNQaWRzQkhROzExNTU4MjYxOkVfS2tXOVpJUkMtenFRbkVxc3BFd3c7MTE1NTY2OTI6cUpxZExXVUJSek9XUVczUGlkc0JIUTsxMTU1NjY5MDpxSnFkTFdVQlJ6T1dRVzNQaWRzQkhROzkyNDcyNzg6NE1XY21jUDlUV08tSi1KYzhrTDVnQTs5MjQ2OTc4Ok5nM0d0czYzUlcyU0dUU1dFemo5Mmc7OTI0NzI3OTo0TVdjbWNQOVRXTy1KLUpjOGtMNWdBOzkyNDY4NzU6Tm5CRWloSDlST2liMDhlVDdFWHlNZzs5MjQ3MTEyOlpQb3M5cDh6VDMyNnczenFhMW1hcVE7OTI0NzA4MjoxNzBGcVVkV1NwU3QtQzJnWHh3RzV3OzE7dG90YWxfaGl0czo1ODc1OTs=

Hint

Your scroll will remain active for 1 minute from the last time you requested results from it. If your scroll expires before you get the last batch of results, you must re-request the scroll_id by setting fetch_all = TRUE as in step 1.

Boolean operators and grouping

You can use AND/OR/NOT boolean operators and grouping to form complicated queries:

q=dbnsfp.polyphen2.hdiv.score:>0.99 AND chrom:1                        AND operator
q=_exists_:dbsnp AND NOT dbsnp.vartype:indel                           NOT operator
q=_exists_:dbsnp AND (NOT dbsnp.vartype:indel)                         grouping with ()

Genomic interval queries can be mixed in as well, but only when surrounded by AND operators, and cannot be used inside parentheses.:

q=dbnsfp.genename:CDK* AND chr2:39406300-39406400
q=chr2:39406300-39406400 AND dbnsfp.genename:CDK*
Escaping reserved characters

If you need to use these reserved characters in your query, make sure to escape them using a back slash (”"):

+ - = && || > < ! ( ) { } [ ] ^ " ~ * ? : \ /
Returned object

A GET request like this:

http://myvariant.info/v1/query?q=chr1:69500-70000&fields=cadd.gene

should return hits as:

{
  "hits": [
    {
      "_id": "chr1:g.69511A>G",
      "_score": 7.2999496,
      "cadd": {
        "gene": {
          "ccds_id": "CCDS30547.1",
          "cds": {
            "cdna_pos": 421,
            "cds_pos": 421,
            "rel_cdna_pos": 0.46,
            "rel_cds_pos": 0.46
          },
          "feature_id": "ENST00000335137",
          "gene_id": "ENSG00000186092",
          "genename": "OR4F5",
          "prot": {
            "domain": "tmhmm",
            "protpos": 141,
            "rel_prot_pos": 0.46
          }
        }
      }
    },
    {
      "_id": "chr1:g.69538G>A",
      "_score": 0.78757036,
      "cadd": {
        "gene": {
          "ccds_id": "CCDS30547.1",
          "cds": {
            "cdna_pos": 448,
            "cds_pos": 448,
            "rel_cdna_pos": 0.49,
            "rel_cds_pos": 0.49
          },
          "feature_id": "ENST00000335137",
          "gene_id": "ENSG00000186092",
          "genename": "OR4F5",
          "prot": {
            "domain": "ndomain",
            "protpos": 150,
            "rel_prot_pos": 0.49
          }
        }
      }
    }
  ],
  "max_score": 7.2999496,
  "took": 2325,
  "total": 2
}

total” in the output gives the total number of matching hits, while the actual hits are returned under “hits” field. “size” parameter controls how many hits will be returned in one request (default is 10). Adjust “size” parameter and “from” parameter to retrieve the additional hits.

Faceted queries

If you need to perform a faceted query, you can pass an optional “facets” parameter. For example, if you want to get the facets on species, you can pass “facets=taxid”:

A GET request like this:

http://myvariant.info/v1/query?q=cadd.gene.gene_id:ENSG00000113368&facets=cadd.polyphen.cat&size=0

should return hits as:

{
  "facets": {
    "cadd.polyphen.cat": {
      "_type": "terms",
      "missing": 797,
      "other": 0,
      "terms": [
        {
          "count": 1902,
          "term": "benign"
        },
        {
          "count": 998,
          "term": "probably_damaging"
        },
        {
          "count": 762,
          "term": "possibly_damaging"
        }
      ],
      "total": 3662
    }
  },
  "hits": [],
  "max_score": 0.0,
  "took": 29,
  "total": 4459
}

Batch queries via POST

Although making simple GET requests above to our variant query service is sufficient for most use cases, there are times you might find it more efficient to make batch queries (e.g., retrieving variant annotation for multiple variants). Fortunately, you can also make batch queries via POST requests when you need:

URL: http://myvariant.info/v1/query
HTTP method:  POST
Query parameters
q
Required, multiple query terms seperated by comma (also support “+” or white space), but no wildcard, e.g., ‘q=rs58991260,rs2500’
scopes
Optional, specify one or more fields (separated by comma) as the search “scopes”, e.g., “scopes=dbsnp.rsid”, “scopes=dbsnp.rsid,dbnsfp.genename”. The available “fields” can be passed to “scopes” parameter are listed here. Default:
fields
Optional, a comma-separated string to limit the fields returned from the matching variant hits. The supported field names can be found from any variant object. Note that it supports dot notation, and wildcards as well, e.g., you can pass “dbnsfp”, “dbnsfp.genename”, or “dbnsfp.aa.*”. If “fields=all”, all available fields will be returned. Default: “all”.
email
Optional, if you are regular users of our services, we encourage you to provide us an email, so that we can better track the usage or follow up with you.
Example code

Unlike GET requests, you can easily test them from browser, make a POST request is often done via a piece of code. Here is a sample python snippet:

import httplib2
h = httplib2.Http()
headers = {'content-type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'}
params = 'q=rs58991260,rs2500&scopes=dbsnp.rsid'
res, con = h.request('http://myvariant.info/v1/query', 'POST', params, headers=headers)
Returned object

Returned result (the value of “con” variable above) from above example code should look like this:

[
{'_id': 'chr1:g.218631822G>A',
  'dbsnp': {'allele_origin': 'unspecified',
   'alleles': [{'allele': 'G', 'freq': 0.9784},
    {'allele': 'A', 'freq': 0.02157}],
   'alt': 'A',
   'chrom': '1',
   'class': 'SNV',
   'dbsnp_build': 129,
   'flags': ['ASP', 'G5', 'G5A', 'GNO', 'KGPhase1', 'KGPhase3', 'SLO'],
   'gmaf': 0.02157,
   'hg19': {'end': 218631823, 'start': 218631822},
   'ref': 'G',
   'rsid': 'rs58991260',
   'validated': True,
   'var_subtype': 'ts',
   'vartype': 'snp'},
  'query': 'rs58991260',
  'wellderly': {'alleles': [{'allele': 'A', 'freq': 0.0025},
    {'allele': 'G', 'freq': 0.9975}],
   'alt': 'A',
   'chrom': '1',
   'gene': 'TGFB2',
   'genotypes': [{'count': 1, 'freq': 0.005, 'genotype': 'G/A'},
    {'count': 199, 'freq': 0.995, 'genotype': 'G/G'}],
   'hg19': {'end': 218631822, 'start': 218631822},
   'pos': 218631822,
   'ref': 'G',
   'vartype': 'snp'}},
 {'_id': 'chr11:g.66397320A>G',
  'dbsnp': {'allele_origin': 'unspecified',
   'alleles': [{'allele': 'A'}, {'allele': 'G'}],
   'alt': 'G',
   'chrom': '11',
   'class': 'SNV',
   'dbsnp_build': 36,
   'flags': ['ASP', 'INT', 'RV', 'U3'],
   'hg19': {'end': 66397321, 'start': 66397320},
   'ref': 'A',
   'rsid': 'rs2500',
   'validated': False,
   'var_subtype': 'ts',
   'vartype': 'snp'},
  'query': 'rs2500'}
]

Tip

“query” field in returned object indicates the matching query term.

If a query term has no match, it will return with “notfound” field as “true”:

[
  ...,
  {'query': '...',
   'notfound': true},
  ...
]

Variant annotation service

This page describes the reference for the MyVariant.info variant annotation web service. It’s also recommended to try it live on our interactive API page.

Service endpoint

http://myvariant.info/v1/variant

GET request

Obtaining the variant annotation via our web service is as simple as calling this URL:

http://myvariant.info/v1/variant/<variantid>

variantid above is an HGVS name based variant id using genomic location based on hg19 human genome assembly.

By default, this will return the complete variant annotation object in JSON format. See here for an example and here for more details. If the input variantid is not valid, 404 (NOT FOUND) will be returned.

Optionally, you can pass a “fields” parameter to return only the annotation you want (by filtering returned object fields):

http://myvariant.info/v1/variant/chr1:g.35367G>A?fields=cadd

fields” accepts any attributes (a.k.a fields) available from the variant object. Multiple attributes should be separated by commas. If an attribute is not available for a specific variant object, it will be ignored. Note that the attribute names are case-sensitive.

Just like the variant query service, you can also pass a “callback” parameter to make a JSONP call.

Query parameters
fields
Optional, can be a comma-separated fields to limit the fields returned from the variant object. If “fields=all”, all available fields will be returned. Note that it supports dot notation as well, e.g., you can pass “cadd.gene”. Default: “fields=all”.
callback
Optional, you can pass a “callback” parameter to make a JSONP call.
filter
Alias for “fields” parameter.
email
Optional, if you are regular users of our services, we encourage you to provide us an email, so that we can better track the usage or follow up with you.

Returned object

A GET request like this:

http://myvariant.info/v1/variant/chr1:g.35367G>A

should return a variant object below:

{
  "_id": "chr1:g.35367G>A",
  "_version": 2,
  "cadd": {
    "alt": "A",
    "annotype": "NonCodingTranscript",
    "bstatistic": 994,
    "chmm": {
      "bivflnk": 0.0,
      "enh": 0.0,
      "enhbiv": 0.0,
      "het": 0.0,
      "quies": 1.0,
      "reprpc": 0.0,
      "reprpcwk": 0.0,
      "tssa": 0.0,
      "tssaflnk": 0.0,
      "tssbiv": 0.0,
      "tx": 0.0,
      "txflnk": 0.0,
      "txwk": 0.0,
      "znfrpts": 0.0
    },
    "chrom": 1,
    "consdetail": "non_coding_exon,nc",
    "consequence": "NONCODING_CHANGE",
    "consscore": 5,
    "cpg": 0.03,
    "dna": {
      "helt": -2.04,
      "mgw": 0.01,
      "prot": 1.54,
      "roll": -0.63
    },
    "encode": {
      "exp": 31.46,
      "h3k27ac": 23.44,
      "h3k4me1": 23.8,
      "h3k4me3": 8.6
    },
    "exon": "2/3",
    "fitcons": 0.577621,
    "gc": 0.48,
    "gene": {
      "cds": {
        "cdna_pos": 476,
        "rel_cdna_pos": 0.4
      },
      "feature_id": "ENST00000417324",
      "gene_id": "ENSG00000237613",
      "genename": "FAM138A"
    },
    "gerp": {
      "n": 1.29,
      "s": -0.558
    },
    "isknownvariant": "FALSE",
    "istv": "FALSE",
    "length": 0,
    "mapability": {
      "20bp": 0,
      "35bp": 0
    },
    "min_dist_tse": 122,
    "min_dist_tss": 707,
    "mutindex": 70,
    "phast_cons": {
      "mammalian": 0.003,
      "primate": 0.013,
      "vertebrate": 0.003
    },
    "phred": 1.493,
    "phylop": {
      "mammalian": -0.155,
      "primate": 0.151,
      "vertebrate": -0.128
    },
    "pos": 35367,
    "rawscore": -0.160079,
    "ref": "G",
    "scoresegdup": 0.99,
    "segway": "D",
    "type": "SNV"
  },
  "dbnsfp": {
    "aa": {
      "aapos_sift": "ENSP00000409362:P44L",
      "alt": "L",
      "codonpos": 2,
      "pos": 44,
      "ref": "P",
      "refcodon": "CCG"
    },
    "alt": "A",
    "ancestral_allele": "G",
    "cadd": {
      "phred": 1.493,
      "raw": -0.160079,
      "raw_rankscore": 0.05963
    },
    "cds_strand": "-",
    "chrom": "1",
    "ensembl": {
      "geneid": "ENSG00000237613",
      "transcriptid": "ENST00000417324"
    },
    "fold-degenerate": 0,
    "genename": "FAM138A",
    "gerp++": {
      "nr": 1.29,
      "rs": -0.558,
      "rs_rankscore": 0.11796
    },
    "hg18": {
      "end": 25230,
      "start": 25230
    },
    "hg19": {
      "end": 35367,
      "start": 35367
    },
    "hg38": {
      "end": 35367,
      "start": 35367
    },
    "lr": {
      "pred": "T",
      "rankscore": 0.32941,
      "score": 0.0846
    },
    "mutationtaster": {
      "converted_rankscore": 0.10124,
      "pred": "N",
      "score": 1.0
    },
    "phastcons": {
      "100way": {
        "vertebrate": 0.001,
        "vertebrate_rankscore": 0.1272
      },
      "46way": {
        "placental": 0.003,
        "placental_rankscore": 0.11579,
        "primate": 0.336,
        "primate_rankscore": 0.28762
      }
    },
    "phylop": {
      "100way": {
        "vertebrate": 0.055,
        "vertebrate_rankscore": 0.14229
      },
      "46way": {
        "placental": -0.143,
        "placental_rankscore": 0.11334,
        "primate": 0.175,
        "primate_rankscore": 0.17021
      }
    },
    "provean": {
      "converted_rankscore": 0.92415,
      "pred": "D",
      "score": -6.73
    },
    "radialsvm": {
      "pred": "T",
      "rankscore": 0.32188,
      "score": -0.9916
    },
    "ref": "G",
    "reliability_index": 5,
    "sift": {
      "converted_rankscore": 0.2575,
      "pred": "T",
      "score": 0.13
    },
    "siphy_29way": {
      "logodds": 3.5364,
      "logodds_rankscore": 0.07795,
      "pi": {
        "a": 0.5429,
        "c": 0.0,
        "g": 0.4571,
        "t": 0.0
      }
    },
    "vest3": {
      "rankscore": 0.16309,
      "score": 0.137
    }
  }
}

Batch queries via POST

Although making simple GET requests above to our variant query service is sufficient in most use cases, there are some times you might find it’s easier to batch query (e.g., retrieving variant annotations for multiple variants). Fortunately, you can also make batch queries via POST requests when you need:

URL: http://myvariant.info/v1/variant
HTTP method:  POST
Query parameters
ids
Required. Accept multiple HGVS variant ids separated by comma, e.g., “ids=chr1:g.35367C>T,chr7:g.55241707G>T,chr16:g.28883241A>G”. Note that currently we only take the input ids up to 1000 maximum, the rest will be omitted.
fields
Optional, can be a comma-separated fields to limit the fields returned from the matching hits. If “fields=all”, all available fields will be returned. Note that it supports dot notation as well, e.g., you can pass “dbnsfp”, “dbnsfp.genename”, or “dbnsfp.aa.*”. Default: “all”.
email
Optional, if you are regular users of our services, we encourage you to provide us an email, so that we can better track the usage or follow up with you.
Example code

Unlike GET requests, you can easily test them from browser, make a POST request is often done via a piece of code, still trivial of course. Here is a sample python snippet:

import httplib2
h = httplib2.Http()
headers = {'content-type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'}
params = 'ids=chr16:g.28883241A>G,chr1:g.35367G>A&fields=dbnsfp.genename,cadd.gene'
res, con = h.request('http://myvariant.info/v1/variant', 'POST', params, headers=headers)
Returned object

Returned result (the value of “con” variable above) from above example code should look like this:

[
  {
    "_id": "chr16:g.28883241A>G",
    "cadd": {
      "gene": {
        "ccds_id": "CCDS53996.1",
        "cds": {
          "cdna_pos": 1889,
          "cds_pos": 1450,
          "rel_cdna_pos": 0.61,
          "rel_cds_pos": 0.64
        },
        "feature_id": "ENST00000322610",
        "gene_id": "ENSG00000178188",
        "genename": "SH2B1",
        "prot": {
          "protpos": 484, "rel_prot_pos": 0.64
        }
      }
    },
    "dbnsfp": {
      "genename": "SH2B1"
    },
    "query": "chr16:g.28883241A>G"
  },
  {
    "_id": "chr1:g.35367G>A",
    "cadd": {
      "gene": {
        "cds": {
          "cdna_pos": 476,
          "rel_cdna_pos": 0.4
        },
        "feature_id": "ENST00000417324",
        "gene_id": "ENSG00000237613",
        "genename": "FAM138A"
      }
    },
    "dbnsfp": {
      "genename": "FAM138A"
    },
    "query": "chr1:g.35367G>A"
  }
]

Server response

The MyVariant.info server returns a variety of query responses, and response status codes. They are listed here.

Note

These examples show query responses using the python requests package.

Status code 200

A 200 status code indicates a successful query, and is accompanied by the query response payload.

In [1]: import requests

In [2]: r = requests.get('http://myvariant.info/v1/query?q=_exists_:clinvar')

In [3]: r.status_code
Out[3]: 200

In [4]: data = r.json()

In [5]: data.keys()
Out[5]: dict_keys(['total', 'max_score', 'took', 'hits'])

Status code 400

A 400 status code indicates an improperly formed query, and is accompanied by a response payload describing the source of the error.

In [6]: r = requests.get('http://myvariant.info/v1/query?q=_exists_:clinvar&size=u')

In [7]: r.status_code
Out[7]: 400

In [8]: data = r.json()

In [9]: data
Out[9]:
{'error': "Expected 'size' parameter to have integer type.  Couldn't convert 'u' to integer",
 'success': False}

Status code 404

A 404 status code indicates either an unrecognized URL, as in (/query is misspelled /quer resulting in an unrecognized URL):

In [10]: r = requests.get('http://myvariant.info/v1/quer?q=_exists_:clinvar')

In [11]: r.status_code
Out[11]: 404

or, for the /variant endpoint, a 404 status code could be from querying for a nonexistent HGVS ID, as in:

In [12]: r = requests.get('http://myvariant.info/v1/variant/5')

In [13]: r.status_code
Out[13]: 404

In [14]: data = r.json()

In [15]: data
Out[15]:
{'error': "ID '5' not found",
 'success': False}

Status code 5xx

Any 5xx status codes are the result of uncaught query errors. Ideally, these should never occur. We routinely check our logs for these types of errors and add code to catch them, but if you see any status 5xx responses, please submit a bug report to help@myvariant.info.

Third-party packages

This page lists the third-party packages/modules built upon the MyVariant.info services.

MyVariant python module

myvariant” is an easy-to-use Python wrapper to access MyVariant.info services.

You can install it easily using either pip or easy_install:

pip install myvariant               #this is preferred

or:

easy_install myvariant

This is a brief example:

In [1]: import myvariant

In [2]: mv = myvariant.MyVariantInfo()

In [3]: mv.getvariant('chr1:g.35367G>A')
Out[3]:
{'_id': 'chr1:g.35367G>A',
 '_version': 1,
 'cadd': {'alt': 'A',
  'annotype': 'NonCodingTranscript',
  'bstatistic': 994,
  'chmm': {'bivflnk': 0.0,
   'enh': 0.0,
   'enhbiv': 0.0,
   'het': 0.0,
   'quies': 1.0,
   'reprpc': 0.0,
   'reprpcwk': 0.0,
   'tssa': 0.0,
   'tssaflnk': 0.0,
   'tssbiv': 0.0,
   'tx': 0.0,
   'txflnk': 0.0,
   'txwk': 0.0,
   'znfrpts': 0.0},
  'chrom': 1,
  'consdetail': 'non_coding_exon,nc',
  'consequence': 'NONCODING_CHANGE',
  'consscore': 5,
  'cpg': 0.03,
  'dna': {'helt': -2.04, 'mgw': 0.01, 'prot': 1.54, 'roll': -0.63},
  'encode': {'exp': 31.46, 'h3k27ac': 23.44, 'h3k4me1': 23.8, 'h3k4me3': 8.6},
  'exon': '2/3',
  'fitcons': 0.577621,
  'gc': 0.48,
  'gene': {'cds': {'cdna_pos': 476, 'rel_cdna_pos': 0.4},
   'feature_id': 'ENST00000417324',
   'gene_id': 'ENSG00000237613',
   'genename': 'FAM138A'},
  'gerp': {'n': 1.29, 's': -0.558},
  'isknownvariant': 'FALSE',
  'istv': 'FALSE',
  'length': 0,
  'mapability': {'20bp': 0, '35bp': 0},
  'min_dist_tse': 122,
  'min_dist_tss': 707,
  'mutindex': 70,
  'phast_cons': {'mammalian': 0.003, 'primate': 0.013, 'vertebrate': 0.003},
  'phred': 1.493,
  'phylop': {'mammalian': -0.155, 'primate': 0.151, 'vertebrate': -0.128},
  'pos': 35367,
  'rawscore': -0.160079,
  'ref': 'G',
  'scoresegdup': 0.99,
  'segway': 'D',
  'type': 'SNV'},
 'snpeff': {'ann': [{'effect': 'non_coding_exon_variant',
    'feature_id': 'NR_026818.1',
    'feature_type': 'transcript',
    'gene_id': 'FAM138A',
    'gene_name': 'FAM138A',
    'hgvs_c': 'n.476C>T',
    'putative_impact': 'MODIFIER',
    'rank': '2',
    'total': '3',
    'transcript_biotype': 'Noncoding'},
   {'effect': 'non_coding_exon_variant',
    'feature_id': 'NR_026820.1.2',
    'feature_type': 'transcript',
    'gene_id': 'FAM138F.2',
    'gene_name': 'FAM138F',
    'hgvs_c': 'n.476C>T',
    'putative_impact': 'MODIFIER',
    'rank': '2',
    'total': '3',
    'transcript_biotype': 'Noncoding'}]},
 'vcf': {'alt': 'A', 'position': '35367', 'ref': 'G'}}

See https://pypi.python.org/pypi/myvariant for more details.

MyVariant R package

An R wrapper for the MyVariant.info API is available in Bioconductor since v3.2. To install:

source("https://bioconductor.org/biocLite.R")
biocLite("myvariant")

To view documentation for your installation, enter R and type:

browseVignettes("myvariant")

For more information, visit the Bioconductor myvariant page.

MyVariant Node.js package

myvariantjs is a Node.js wrapper for the MyVariant.info API, developed and maintained by Larry Hengl. To install:

npm install myvariantjs --save

Some brief usage examples:

var mv = require('myvariantjs');
mv.getvariant('chr9:g.107620835G>A');
mv.getvariant('chr9:g.107620835G>A', ['dbnsfp.genename', 'cadd.phred']);

mv.getvariants("chr1:g.866422C>T,chr1:g.876664G>A,chr1:g.69635G>C");  // string of delimited ids
mv.getvariants(["chr1:g.866422C>T", "chr1:g.876664G>A","chr1:g.69635G>C"]);

mv.query("chr1:69000-70000", {fields:'dbnsfp.genename'});
mv.query("dbsnp.rsid:rs58991260", {fields:'dbnsfp'});

mv.querymany(['rs58991260', 'rs2500'], 'dbsnp.rsid');
mv.querymany(['RCV000083620', 'RCV000083611', 'RCV000083584'], 'clinvar.rcv_accession');

For more information, visit its API and usage docs, and its github code repository.

You can also check out this neat demo application developed by Larry using this myvariantjs package.

Another MyVariant.info python module

This is another python wrapper of MyVariant.info services created by Brian Schrader. The repository is available here.

You can install this package with PyPI like this:

pip install myvariant-api

A JBrowse plugin for MyVariant.info and MyGene.info

JBrowse provides a fast, embeddable genome browser built completely with JavaScript and HTML5.

Colin from the JBrowse team made a very nice plugin to visualize the gene and variant annotations in JBrowse Genome Browser, using the data served from both MyGene.info and MyVariant.info APIs.