|
Nature Genetics, Vol. 25, No. 1. (01 May 2000), pp. 25-29.
by Michael Ashburner, Catherine A. Ball, Judith A. Blake, et al.David Botstein, Heather Butler, J. Michael Cherry, Allan P. Davis, Kara Dolinski, Selina S. Dwight, Janan T. Eppig, Midori A. Harris, David P. Hill, Laurie Issel-Tarver, Andrew Kasarskis, Suzanna Lewis, John C. Matese, Joel E. Richardson, Martin Ringwald, Gerald M. Rubin, Gavin Sherlock
posted by
93 people
fbergmann
christianholz
kimbie
lmichan
operon
kmdaily
josepe
krapnik
8_01
suizan
sanchezbuelna
Jporci
artaban421
mtaschuk
niallhaslam
Zephyrus
nicklynch
mauriceccy
pmendes
jperkins
timhubbard
ipark-kaist
jeremymiller
vkwn
MarcoAlvarez
humburg
mqbphcw3
kiekyon
karinlag
ocs
marti
robert85
allysonlister
daforerog
chasmand
lawraga
jorisslob
bertelsen
mshossain
ajbattle
paszkows
coela
fbristow
kshameer
anthropomorphism
nolodie
dagmar
Robinder
verdicchio
raistrick
BTS-PT-AS-CS
vertikalist
aalibes
miguel
dragonrez
lfriedl
chad_davis
yas
balajis
indigoviolet
benny
dullhunk
nirfriedman
fisherp
caporaso
helliontroy
zlu
gurkanbebek
djkt
massivemayhem
incovoma
leechuck
aconesa
sgoetz
javamint
bootsy
PunkRock
natstreet
naegele
kdl
Bioinformatics
EisenLab
T_lab
biomedical-nlp
CitoJam
pablomendes
carlk
marck
dgront
roys
rvosa
FAB-lab
fongenae
AbstractGenomic sequencing has made it clear that a large fraction of the genes specifying the core biological functions are shared by all eukaryotes. Knowledge of the biological role of such shared proteins in one organism can often be transferred to other organisms. The goal of the Gene Ontology Consortium is to produce a dynamic, controlled vocabulary that can be applied to all eukaryotes even as knowledge of gene and protein roles in cells is accumulating and changing. To this end, three ... | |
|
Journal of molecular biology, Vol. 215, No. 3. (5 October 1990), pp. 403-410.
posted by
91 people
AustinC
dutilh
TLVincent
dfdong
claire_jubin
danbolser
PolymeraseI
VGreiff
richter80
krapnik
azazello
rshe
mtaschuk
sjcockell
niallhaslam
djohnson
thegoose
humburg
timhubbard
pachorip
n00c
maria_hauser
rpetrenko
parnell
yylin
esyoun
APRegier
idoerg
Neeperando
robert85
thegoose2
daforerog
mcbla
coela
alessandroparini
bertelsen
Blackbeard
florisbuijzen
laurabailey
treangen
pwais
mmartin
C. elegans / WormBase
tharris
dmp
camster
davidng
evaf
dragonrez
jwm
jmeppley
Ayest
RMGraze
ea
yas
balajis
alexg
indigoviolet
moborg
arcticrasta
dullhunk
dgront
caporaso
michC
myui
BioNica
CitoJam
rabio
timflutre
lusk
cjeans
incovoma
beatrizfernandez
wenhan
jtomasch
GustavoLacerda
sgoetz
siebertm
ichbins81
jofiel
dbk-lab
EisenLab
T_lab
biomedical-nlp
Microbial-Ecology
Thaverkamp
shung
marti
ashaytan
benwei
granujilla
AbstractA new approach to rapid sequence comparison, basic local alignment search tool (BLAST), directly approximates alignments that optimize a measure of local similarity, the maximal segment pair (MSP) score. Recent mathematical results on the stochastic properties of MSP scores allow an analysis of the performance of this method as well as the statistical significance of alignments it generates. The basic algorithm is simple and robust; it can be implemented in a number of ways and applied in a variety of contexts ... | |
|
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Vol. 102, No. 43. (25 October 2005), pp. 15545-15550.
by Aravind Subramanian, Pablo Tamayo, Vamsi K. Mootha, et al.Sayan Mukherjee, Benjamin L. Ebert, Michael A. Gillette, Amanda Paulovich, Scott L. Pomeroy, Todd R. Golub, Eric S. Lander, Jill P. Mesirov
posted by
60 people
mingzhilin
lipido
cmap
kimbie
mayercd
icecrown
GustavoLacerda
jmstat
mysickova
buyske
bertelsen
Jporci
gbloeb
miskar
giovenko
greg
dolchan
pattersonee
mhamidi
jperkins
zufar
ptrobajo
antonkratz
yaredo
tmmurali
VGreiff
daforerog
paszkows
ipark-kaist
ajbattle
jessopher
askrajiv
idonaldson
ihpark
chrisamiller
dragonrez
jfr
balajis
maryee
xwbcn
hpiwowar
aviad_work
ealloza
jdiggans
jeremymiller
frohike
hawkeyehammer
schuylrp
natstreet
Bioinformatics
BioinfoCIPF
GeschwindLab
Indigene
heliopais
shikin
waghsk
roys
srp33
sgoetz
AbnerCYH
Abstract10.1073/pnas.0506580102 Although genomewide RNA expression analysis has become a routine tool in biomedical research, extracting biological insight from such information remains a major challenge. Here, we describe a powerful analytical method called Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) for interpreting gene expression data. The method derives its power by focusing on gene sets, that is, groups of genes that share common biological function, chromosomal location, or regulation. We demonstrate how GSEA yields insights into several cancer-related data sets, including leukemia and lung ... | |
|
Science In Science, Vol. 291, No. 5507. (16 February 2001), pp. 1304-1351.
by J. Craig Venter, Mark D. Adams, Eugene W. Myers, et al.Peter W. Li, Richard J. Mural, Granger G. Sutton, Hamilton O. Smith, Mark Yandell, Cheryl A. Evans, Robert A. Holt, Jeannine D. Gocayne, Peter Amanatides, Richard M. Ballew, Daniel H. Huson, Jennifer R. Wortman, Qing Zhang, Chinnappa D. Kodira, Xiangqun H. Zheng, Lin Chen, Marian Skupski, Gangadharan Subramanian, Paul D. Thomas, Jinghui Zhang, George L. Gabor Miklos, Catherine Nelson, Samuel Broder, Andrew G. Clark, Joe Nadeau, Victor A. McKusick, Norton Zinder, Arnold J. Levine, Richard J. Roberts, Mel Simon, Carolyn Slayman, Michael Hunkapiller, Randall Bolanos, Arthur Delcher, Ian Dew, Daniel Fasulo, Michael Flanigan, Liliana Florea, Aaron Halpern, Sridhar Hannenhalli, Saul Kravitz, Samuel Levy, Clark Mobarry, Knut Reinert, Karin Remington, Jane Abu-Threideh, Ellen Beasley, Kendra Biddick, Vivien Bonazzi, Rhonda Brandon, Michele Cargill, Ishwar Chandramouliswaran, Rosane Charlab, Kabir Chaturvedi, Zuoming Deng, Valentina D. Francesco, Patrick Dunn, Karen Eilbeck, Carlos Evangelista, Andrei E. Gabrielian, Weiniu Gan, Wangmao Ge, Fangcheng Gong, Zhiping Gu, Ping Guan, Thomas J. Heiman, Maureen E. Higgins, Rui-Ru Ji, Zhaoxi Ke, Karen A. Ketchum, Zhongwu Lai, Yiding Lei, Zhenya Li, Jiayin Li, Yong Liang, Xiaoying Lin, Fu Lu, Gennady V. Merkulov, Natalia Milshina, Helen M. Moore, Ashwinikumar K. Naik, Vaibhav A. Narayan, Beena Neelam, Deborah Nusskern, Douglas B. Rusch, Steven Salzberg, Wei Shao, Bixiong Shue, Jingtao Sun, Zhen Y. Wang, Aihui Wang, Xin Wang, Jian Wang, Ming-Hui Wei, Ron Wides, Chunlin Xiao, Chunhua Yan, Alison Yao, Jane Ye, Ming Zhan, Weiqing Zhang, Hongyu Zhang, Qi Zhao, Liansheng Zheng, Fei Zhong, Wenyan Zhong, Shiaoping C. Zhu, Shaying Zhao, Dennis Gilbert, Suzanna Baumhueter, Gene Spier, Christine Carter, Anibal Cravchik, Trevor Woodage, Feroze Ali, Huijin An, Aderonke Awe, Danita Baldwin, Holly Baden, Mary Barnstead, Ian Barrow, Karen Beeson, Dana Busam, Amy Carver, Center, Angela, Ming L. Cheng, Liz Curry, Steve Danaher, Lionel Davenport, Raymond Desilets, Susanne Dietz, Kristina Dodson, Lisa Doup, Steven Ferriera, Neha Garg, Andres Gluecksmann, Brit Hart, Jason Haynes, Charles Haynes, Cheryl Heiner, Suzanne Hladun, Damon Hostin, Jarrett Houck, Timothy Howland, Chinyere Ibegwam, Jeffery Johnson, Francis Kalush, Lesley Kline, Shashi Koduru, Amy Love, Felecia Mann, David May, Steven McCawley, Tina McIntosh, Ivy McMullen, Mee Moy, Linda Moy, Brian Murphy, Keith Nelson, Cynthia Pfannkoch, Eric Pratts, Vinita Puri, Hina Qureshi, Matthew Reardon, Robert Rodriguez, Yu-Hui Rogers, Deanna Romblad, Bob Ruhfel, Richard Scott, Cynthia Sitter, Michelle Smallwood, Erin Stewart, Renee Strong, Ellen Suh, Reginald Thomas, Ni N. Tint, Sukyee Tse, Claire Vech, Gary Wang, Jeremy Wetter, Sherita Williams, Monica Williams, Sandra Windsor, Emily Winn-Deen, Keriellen Wolfe, Jayshree Zaveri, Karena Zaveri, Josep F. Abril, Roderic Guigo, Michael J. Campbell, Kimmen V. Sjolander, Brian Karlak, Anish Kejariwal, Huaiyu Mi, Betty Lazareva, Thomas Hatton, Apurva Narechania, Karen Diemer, Anushya Muruganujan, Nan Guo, Shinji Sato, Vineet Bafna, Sorin Istrail, Ross Lippert, Russell Schwartz, Brian Walenz, Shibu Yooseph, David Allen, Anand Basu, James Baxendale, Louis Blick, Marcelo Caminha, John Carnes-Stine, Parris Caulk, Yen-Hui Chiang, My Coyne, Carl Dahlke, Anne D. Mays, Maria Dombroski, Michael Donnelly, Dale Ely, Shiva Esparham, Carl Fosler, Harold Gire, Stephen Glanowski, Kenneth Glasser, Anna Glodek, Mark Gorokhov, Ken Graham, Barry Gropman, Michael Harris, Jeremy Heil, Scott Henderson, Jeffrey Hoover, Donald Jennings, Catherine Jordan, James Jordan, John Kasha, Leonid Kagan, Cheryl Kraft, Alexander Levitsky, Mark Lewis, Xiangjun Liu, John Lopez, Daniel Ma, William Majoros, Joe McDaniel, Sean Murphy, Matthew Newman, Trung Nguyen, Ngoc Nguyen, Marc Nodell, Sue Pan, Jim Peck, Marshall Peterson, William Rowe, Robert Sanders, John Scott, Michael Simpson, Thomas Smith, Arlan Sprague, Timothy Stockwell, Russell Turner, Eli Venter, Mei Wang, Meiyuan Wen, David Wu, Mitchell Wu, Ashley Xia, Ali Zandieh, Xiaohong Zhu
posted by
43 people
APRegier
mlog
guhjy
VGreiff
darenberg
n00c
rshe
dspringett
humburg
vplagnol
mqbphcw3
Scis0000002
fisherp
sgoetz
thegoose
treangen
frohike
jo_davies
reyez
twenta
aramata
Cortel
jwortman
jnemecek
bicko
Dax42
yas
balajis
xdeupi
arcticrasta
dgront
olympos
incovoma
naegele
mimulus_99
Proteinkinases
T_lab
LabCompMed
brant
granujilla
CitoJam
renatomilani
Neeperando
Abstract10.1126/science.1058040 ... | |
|
Genome Research, Vol. 13, No. 11. (November 2003), pp. 2498-2504.
by Paul Shannon, Andrew Markiel, Owen Ozier, et al.Nitin S. Baliga, Jonathan T. Wang, Daniel Ramage, Nada Amin, Benno Schwikowski, Trey Ideker
posted by
45 people
chrahn
guhjy
ceciklein
saunders
ganden
chibatching
vjethava
JeremyZucker
daveGerrard
fastjoe23
badi
stharward
kentz
tonamswish
janani137
shung
schwartzjmc
APRegier
panghouse
robert85
capitall
higueruelo
shikin
daforerog
cswinburne
thomaskelder
nolodie
giovenko
Stew
dragonrez
balajis
tvdbulck
frohike
carmaus
dagmar
natstreet
jlh64
dIEMoSIRIS
MoSi-Rostock
compneur
Evangelia
pmendes
yggdrasil
carlk
Borelli
Abstract10.1101/gr.1239303 Cytoscape is an open source software project for integrating biomolecular interaction networks with high-throughput expression data and other molecular states into a unified conceptual framework. Although applicable to any system of molecular components and interactions, Cytoscape is most powerful when used in conjunction with large databases of protein-protein, protein-DNA, and genetic interactions that are increasingly available for humans and model organisms. Cytoscape's software Core provides basic functionality to layout and query the network; to visually integrate the network with expression ... | |
|
Nature, Vol. 409, No. 6822. (15 February 2001), pp. 860-921.
posted by
49 people
haarcuba
mlog
lmichan
petkraw
dutilh
rsaito
VGreiff
n00c
rshe
timflutre
bicko
jmanning2k
kentz
humburg
vplagnol
mqbphcw3
ThomasDOtto
psique
timhubbard
jo_davies
daforerog
taroleo
micromassive
wimufi
sgoetz
fisherp
reyez
bozdagd
cthachuk
Cortel
dragonrez
jnemecek
gg
Dax42
aprasad
yas
balajis
xdeupi
dullhunk
dgront
djkt
olympos
nagendraproj
incovoma
Proteinkinases
T_lab
LabCompMed
yoanjacquemin
brant
AbstractThe human genome holds an extraordinary trove of information about human development, physiology, medicine and evolution. Here we report the results of an international collaboration to produce and make freely available a draft sequence of the human genome. We also present an initial analysis of the data, describing some of the insights that can be gleaned from the sequence. ... | |
|
Nature Biotechnology, Vol. 27, No. 8. (07 August 2009), pp. 735-741.
by Nicolas L. Novere, Michael Hucka, Huaiyu Mi, et al.Stuart Moodie, Falk Schreiber, Anatoly Sorokin, Emek Demir, Katja Wegner, Mirit I. Aladjem, Sarala M. Wimalaratne, Frank T. Bergman, Ralph Gauges, Peter Ghazal, Hideya Kawaji, Lu Li, Yukiko Matsuoka, Alice Villeger, Sarah E. Boyd, Laurence Calzone, Melanie Courtot, Ugur Dogrusoz, Tom C. Freeman, Akira Funahashi, Samik Ghosh, Akiya Jouraku, Sohyoung Kim, Fedor Kolpakov, Augustin Luna, Sven Sahle, Esther Schmidt, Steven Watterson, Guanming Wu, Igor Goryanin, Douglas B. Kell, Chris Sander, Herbert Sauro, Jacky L. Snoep, Kurt Kohn, Hiroaki Kitano
posted by
57 people
BergmanLab
daveGerrard
chrahn
fbergmann
Ilzins
schwartzjmc
vkwadhwa
kou_jinsei
Reyna_Lara
jfr
nurban
agomez
heliopais
kshameer
nuin
singhsh
greg
tonamswish
pablocarb
josepe
abc623
daforerog
abhishek_tiwari
Orengo Group Journal Picks
robertrentzsch
ngehlenborg
pekrau
thegoose
bertelsen
fgibson
Borelli
thomaskelder
pmendes
dullhunk
polivares
chasmand
brianb
roys
torfinnnome
guhjy
Zephyrus
lenov
reyez
allysonlister
apocapoc
renatomilani
VGreiff
druvus
sjcockell
Journal picks
jandot
megraw
leliavski
frohike
Neuroblastoma
fpattyn
jhyang
AbstractCircuit diagrams and Unified Modeling Language diagrams are just two examples of standard visual languages that help accelerate work by promoting regularity, removing ambiguity and enabling software tool support for communication of complex information. Ironically, despite having one of the highest ratios of graphical to textual information, biology still lacks standard graphical notations. The recent deluge of biological knowledge makes addressing this deficit a pressing concern. Toward this goal, we present the Systems Biology Graphical Notation (SBGN), a visual language developed ... | |
|
Oikos, Vol. 116, No. 5. (May 2007), pp. 723-727.
posted by
351 people
pullus
RobertSOakes
wmdeneve
spores
noamross
tkf
ypjones
dutilh
mahmoodr
installe
andreassorge
paas
mariapage
karimartins
GuillaumeFilteau
lq408
loison
ommachi
jennmaine
calvin199
perbohner
wangxinxi
dalyx
ararazul
jodeleeuw
mcartwri
ucbcjbm
idlegrraphx
timread
tuijajetsu
WeiquanXu
Alessi
fisnik
mculbert
kwoodsend
Rohdium
TKAB
chitsirin12
bmsousa
rossmounce
gareth
yetun
guillermina
zouchen621
jmchen1011
mfenner
loopback007
mcc19732001
herrk
alexandreconde
cesardariovelandia
cami
tverwaes
nellygidas
mbromdhane
flydream0428
phildeley
fierykylin
dynaopto
nilda1ma
GustavoLacerda
thiagomanel
mojin
atlantis2360
teichman
gena
gbierens
kgrothoff
fbaroni
brembs
di_hernandez
scorullon
Semantic-Social-Networks
INK-SSCI-SCI@CiteuLike.org
INK-SSCI-SCI
hearton965
raf003
dejang
jrfine421
wkretzsch
mzygmunt
pajoma
ddimitriu
pcornill
zio_tom78
tramullas
alun
willwade
rabio
librarymistress
jcb1973
hideojoho
mykanth123
HCCSProgram
Journal picks
jimburton
yeminjiao
JillianHowlett
orrajabi
marcela
janneb
goncalojustino
clementinecornu
isp
Nezha
jchiovaro
michaelfieseler
nathancooper
amjedbj
fredericraymond
Geknitics
debeerjonathan
nuin
thorium
ELMlab
pirapira
arghavani
Wikipedia
Social Web
joawe96
lperg
paulymer
dgront
coherent
ZhangXiatian
richardmcgee
andre7520
derchao
mittinatten
iskanbasal
JoseBrox
jstenman
zhangrenxia
janderz8
ulmer
azwinkau
sdaehne
fjanoos
eudominguezmartin
jaspervoskuilen
gvdh
kimbatchelor
welliegirl
DavidG67
nellapower
jimo75
sachingarg
claudiushauptmann
jmzhuo
Horduna
toszko
chriswillmott
mthomure
Thaverkamp
ibre
sfalsharif
lafuente
Sergey_gerbek
Torsten_Holmer
aaltenburger
tminze
mmborges
Dannycoutinho
soniapereira
Anita13
simonhearne
rudalert
ulrichs
UWA Science Communication
duel_jetty
nmsx
TVB
timsenior
livingthingdan
alhoori
poojamaj
letillett
christianholz
amynmoore
pvdg
leonardo
Med Anthro @ UF
cgravlee
bhengeveld
ansobol
jrw
proportional
wendygarnica
jsatkosk
eumelus
pdpcosta
AnthonySoprano
wasteland93
buchgeher
lmichan
NIlz
sxs732
artaban421
kieranhood
rabit
pauljhurtado
SantoshKalwar
aldra
zchen75
nbawia
Zephyrus
jgebbie
lanmuzi
amadeusstevenson
akuhn
metatheory
Fneesen
hkimura
beete
CamilleH
luciensamary
jcreed
R_C_Cordeiro
thenose
cyounkin
robertlischke
bspackman
lyss
Scholarly Communication
sebpaquet
c_hughes
klauso
kaiserm
tomhebbron
tarokiritani
nGrenier
girabbit
jaia
CulCog
alexander_bauer
Gaetan
cjhall
mdwelsh231
sniklas
polivares
MurphysLab
ckai1
tux2000
petko_bogdanov
carelcad
Tomste
yangjustinc
thegoose
michaelbanks
mrt2k9
marekrud
ibuch
pawelsobko
klexa
tunheim
Elley
AJCann
amoreno
operon
McCammon
barry
jod999
guhjy
pick600
leliavski
ombamawu
mjoach
Publicase
Thermaneutist
gwallau
tnhh
signori
birte
bertelsen
mmuecke
Mohan-S
Dori2008
konstantinos
charoy
flips
arsyed
sjefarrar
rohanlowe
syah
jjray
zzh1986
brownstudy
abellogin
fungal
sgeuter
jkglenn
psique
anphony
ajaymalik
jjrohal
markusd
conradlee
mschmer
gkoenig
natstreet
BergmanLab
cisevol
silberbauer
Khavkin's lab
ArtemPankin
druvus
allysonlister
dullhunk
VGreiff
dbk
ultrascichick
ahaeusler
rickl
brian
toomash
orca
Borelli
cmunson
lfriedl
sterovetta
maike
echinotrix
awooga
scpeters
jford
pratap
williamdwalker
sjones
pseudopharm
cjeans
sensesublime
TaqSys
soumitri
GeeSharpMinor
tumo
rebeccamancy
ascharle
suizan
kaniko
erklaerbaer
boosda
kdl
Neuroscience
STS
ColDyn
feminist_technoscience
OrganizationResearch
Enactment
Academic Writing, Literacies and Discourse
hejibo
randomname
| |
|
Nature reviews. Genetics, Vol. 9, No. 7. (13 July 2008), pp. 509-515.
posted by
51 people
meanerelk
jonathancooper
kimbie
vkwn
icecrown
GustavoLacerda
lisa1
singhsh
epigenetics
davidmam
Thaverkamp
druvus
dullhunk
8_01
suizan
dolchan
Borelli
Zephyrus
VGreiff
klo
thomaskelder
ilyashl
phoenixzxl
MarcoAlvarez
isakemal
bertelsen
daforerog
jfr
djkt
guhjy
aheilbut
mariakmejia
cmzmasek
A_Olympia
logics of knowledge
realzhang
carlk
roys
gjuggler
fpattyn
RamuAnandakrishnan
ptrobajo
giovenko
cabbagesofdoom
tmmurali
renatomilani
capitall
marck
rvosa
FAB-lab
bpcusack
AbstractThe Gene Ontology (GO) project is a collaboration among model organism databases to describe gene products from all organisms using a consistent and computable language. GO produces sets of explicitly defined, structured vocabularies that describe biological processes, molecular functions and cellular components of gene products in both a computer- and human-readable manner. Here we describe key aspects of GO, which, when overlooked, can cause erroneous results, and address how these pitfalls can be avoided. ... | |
|
Science, Vol. 313, No. 5795. (29 September 2006), pp. 1929-1935.
by Justin Lamb, Emily D. Crawford, David Peck, et al.Joshua W. Modell, Irene C. Blat, Matthew J. Wrobel, Jim Lerner, Jean-Philippe Brunet, Aravind Subramanian, Kenneth N. Ross, Michael Reich, Haley Hieronymus, Guo Wei, Scott A. Armstrong, Stephen J. Haggarty, Paul A. Clemons, Ru Wei, Steven A. Carr, Eric S. Lander, Todd R. Golub
posted by
44 people
cmap
daforerog
sgoetz
shikin
ilyashl
gbloeb
zufar
ipark-kaist
bertelsen
mingzhi
AbnerCYH
Dulcinea
dansullivanblk
BragilMassoud
guhjy
kuhn
jfr
yas
balajis
marcius
lhonigberg
neveaire
kengg
ealloza
koller
mlovell
jdiggans
ezra
jeremymiller
frohike
massivemayhem
lp2
pablomendes
Biostatistics
Computational-Genomics
Bioinformatics
Neuroscience
T_lab
BioinfoCIPF
SGU-CIPF
GeschwindLab
Plantandetc
jdiezperezj
askrajiv
AbstractTo pursue a systematic approach to the discovery of functional connections among diseases, genetic perturbation, and drug action, we have created the first installment of a reference collection of gene-expression profiles from cultured human cells treated with bioactive small molecules, together with pattern-matching software to mine these data. We demonstrate that this "Connectivity Map" resource can be used to find connections among small molecules sharing a mechanism of action, chemicals and physiological processes, and diseases and drugs. These results indicate the ... | |
|
J. Cell Biol. In J. Cell Biol., Vol. 177, No. 1. (9 April 2007), pp. 7-11.
posted by
70 people
jtcribbs
idlegrraphx
takeshou
mcc19732001
bpcusack
Yanno
rka2p
chriscole
Jporci
pjmaybank
inbetweener
tt
srmblack
abhishek_tiwari
druvus
bangyuzhou
schoeband
brianb
cambray
dbikard
rec3141
ajaymalik
Gorzomagnificent
daforerog
sen_cheng
yangjustinc
maximilianh
qwermish
bayesian
ntakano
flips
inesdesantiago
brian
ana
batallah
manduca
kuhn
Borelli
dayjm
kristina
chad_davis
tny
dullhunk
rabu
lechristophe
nelmor
jdelcampo
fishtank
emmahe
lisa1
Daria_G
devender
bmaust
cabbagezs
natstreet
winterschlaefer
krokicki
loopback007
structural_bioinformatics
Bioinformatics
VisionLab
FlowCytometry
Microbial-Ecology
wilbur
tdmckee
renatomilani
delenca
arindrartow
guhjy
mjoach
AbstractError bars commonly appear in figures in publications, but experimental biologists are often unsure how they should be used and interpreted. In this article we illustrate some basic features of error bars and explain how they can help communicate data and assist correct interpretation. Error bars may show confidence intervals, standard errors, standard deviations, or other quantities. Different types of error bars give quite different information, and so figure legends must make clear what error bars represent. We suggest eight simple ... | |
|
Nucleic acids research, Vol. 25, No. 17. (1 September 1997), pp. 3389-3402.
posted by
78 people
HawkinsJohnC
Sjitprasutwit
TLVincent
saunders
rshe
niallhaslam
ucbcjbm
timhubbard
parnell
tfuji
maria_hauser
jbhiatt
yylin
mgomes
BioNica
idoerg
pjcite
swp09
kgutwin
mcbla
cpwardell
References for 3DSim paper
johanviklund
daforerog
nlapalu
sebk
tjimenez
shung
pwais
dakelley
knaseanka
setar
iakes
miguel
kaarsinogen
bjorns
bicko
jmeppley
chad_davis
balajis
nuke2005
eweaver
david_parsons
indigoviolet
dullhunk
robert
dgront
happy_manatee
caporaso
treangen
kengg
manzanita
CitoJam
jdelcampo
aengisch
rabio
massivemayhem
mirzazadeh
azazello
sujaikumar
beatrizfernandez
GustavoLacerda
siebertm
adijr
viktor21614
EisenLab
biomedical-nlp
Microbial-Ecology
Plantandetc
mijam
grottenolm
bandrewfox
edvin
newton1234
mariakmejia
granujilla
marti
CharlesM
AbstractThe BLAST programs are widely used tools for searching protein and DNA databases for sequence similarities. For protein comparisons, a variety of definitional, algorithmic and statistical refinements described here permits the execution time of the BLAST programs to be decreased substantially while enhancing their sensitivity to weak similarities. A new criterion for triggering the extension of word hits, combined with a new heuristic for generating gapped alignments, yields a gapped BLAST program that runs at approximately three times the speed of ... | |
|
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Vol. 104, No. 21. (22 May 2007), pp. 8685-8690.
posted by
54 people
schwartzjmc
alebalbin
tomhebbron
icecrown
frohike
robfsouza
bertelsen
smichan
biomcgary
pawelsobko
CurAbility
Scis0000002
qluo
cbforrest
Network Analysis of Genes Regulated in Renal Diseases
daforerog
nedwards
Dulcinea
saket
kaarsinogen
roys
Yanno
guhjy
aalibes
cannin
kuhn
jfr
yas
balicea
neveaire
bundschu
raiyar
grahamc
joepickrell
leSyl
henning
dejori
xingxu
winterschlaefer
naegele
Biostatistics
Computational-Genomics
Bioinformatics
Neuroscience
steinmetzlab
shoshin
ic4
generif_paper
shikin
nolodie
GomezLab
mingzhi
carlk
yaredo
Abstract10.1073/pnas.0701361104 A network of disorders and disease genes linked by known disorder–gene associations offers a platform to explore in a single graph-theoretic framework all known phenotype and disease gene associations, indicating the common genetic origin of many diseases. Genes associated with similar disorders show both higher likelihood of physical interactions between their products and higher expression profiling similarity for their transcripts, supporting the existence of distinct disease-specific functional modules. We find that essential human genes are likely to encode hub proteins ... | |
|
Biostatistics (Oxford, England), Vol. 4, No. 2. (1 April 2003), pp. 249-264.
by Rafael A. Irizarry, Bridget Hobbs, Francois Collin, et al.Yasmin D. Beazer-Barclay, Kristen J. Antonellis, Uwe Scherf, Terence P. Speed
posted by
33 people
jfr
sgoetz
jperkins
VGreiff
lwaldron
shikin
YukaH
huiminC
robert85
emptyhb
heliopais
giovenko
winterschlaefer
miguel
textoris
Dax42
RMGraze
fisherp
tvdbulck
dtc1
vpschulz
rmk
joepickrell
ghattem
bertelsen
jo_davies
MathBio
Bioinformatics
Computational_Systems_Biology
Systems_Biology
waszak
bakakaj
vertikalist
AbstractIn this paper we report exploratory analyses of high-density oligonucleotide array data from the Affymetrix GeneChip system with the objective of improving upon currently used measures of gene expression. Our analyses make use of three data sets: a small experimental study consisting of five MGU74A mouse GeneChip arrays, part of the data from an extensive spike-in study conducted by Gene Logic and Wyeth's Genetics Institute involving 95 HG-U95A human GeneChip arrays; and part of a dilution study conducted by Gene Logic ... | |
|
Nature Reviews Genetics, Vol. 7, No. 8. (01 August 2006), pp. 593-605.
posted by
22 people
fbergmann
mtaschuk
irenas
abhishek_tiwari
allysonlister
ptrobajo
hbricknell
daforerog
natstreet
aalibes
jfr
rdiaz
ronaldozhou
mhucka
dagmar
peterli
sgoetz
dIEMoSIRIS
compneur
giovenko
fgibson
GelML
AbstractHigh-throughput technologies are generating large amounts of complex data that have to be stored in databases, communicated to various data analysis tools and interpreted by scientists. Data representation and communication standards are needed to implement these steps efficiently. Here we give a classification of various standards related to systems biology and discuss various aspects of standardization in life sciences in general. Why are some standards more successful than others, what are the prerequisites for a standard to succeed and what are ... | |
|
Nature reviews. Genetics, Vol. 5, No. 2. (February 2004), pp. 101-113.
posted by
52 people
jthorniley
schwartzjmc
daforerog
fastjoe23
arsyed
thepogoman
mtagaya
camster
snuppepuppan
dbk
greg
guhjy
LeightonP
hununu
felciano
mague
kuhn
textoris
rhem1224
lfriedl
balajis
alexg
wnpx
jknabe
adepace
nickluscombe
bundschu
awooga
jdiggans
jeremymiller
uprock
timflutre
mikaelhuss
gcalda
grahamc
fishtank
jayster4
naegele
streptomyces
dbk-lab
kdl
EisenLab
TCR_Signaling
EBI-regulation
SysbioMPI-TCells
GeschwindLab
generif_paper
Evangelia
heliopais
shikin
GeneGo
hryk
| |
|
(07 July 2006)
by Uri Alon
posted by
26 people
RobertSOakes
murphbg
apri101
Systems_Biology
Computational_Systems_Biology
Sergey_gerbek
dbikard
fastjoe23
bertelsen
ilyashl
Scis0000002
fgibson
reyez
flyme
dullhunk
joseph_x_zhou
aalibes
balajis
balicea
mattjb
fishtank
akastrin
ComplexAdaptiveSystems
DSTO-CAS
jjray
azazello
AbstractThorough and accessible, this book presents the design principles of biological systems, and highlights the recurring circuit elements that make up biological networks. It provides a simple mathematical framework which can be used to understand and even design biological circuits. The textavoids specialist terms, focusing instead on several well-studied biological systems that concisely demonstrate key principles. **An Introduction to Systems Biology: Design Principles of Biological Circuits **builds a solid foundation for the intuitive understanding of general principles. It encourages the reader to ask _why_ a system is designed in ... | |
|
Science, Vol. 324, No. 5923. (3 April 2009), pp. 85-89.
by Ross D. King, Jem Rowland, Stephen G. Oliver, et al.Michael Young, Wayne Aubrey, Emma Byrne, Maria Liakata, Magdalena Markham, Pinar Pir, Larisa N. Soldatova, Andrew Sparkes, Kenneth E. Whelan, Amanda Clare
posted by
73 people
RobertSOakes
fbergmann
spores
bertelsen
Schopfel
abhishek_tiwari
mfenner
viren4388
peterli
davide_caldo
agomez
leliavski
ngehlenborg
yuifu
singhsh
Sergey_gerbek
schwartzjmc
yyfwuhan
antonkratz
CulCog
ckai1
jcaddy
thegoose
tommcdonagh
tonamswish
qwermish
axeltan
ocs
TobiasAbenius
CameronNeylon
guhjy
davidcsterratt
bcondon
Scis0000002
kevinemamy
TRHvidsten
emiko
Zephyrus
arne
muraken
vagoskar
katiehumphry
NaCTeM
Effie
robertknight
acrmartins
psique
dbikard
tyrell_turing
Tomste
renatomilani
subhacom
druvus
ramanuja
sen_cheng
coela
VGreiff
hagechouchin443
Benja
austin
stober
rdiaz
Fortran
napvasconcelos
mikel_egana
allysonlister
dullhunk
fgibson
pkonings
MetabolicModeling
JeremyZucker
jbhiatt
tmmurali
AbstractThe basis of science is the hypothetico-deductive method and the recording of experiments in sufficient detail to enable reproducibility. We report the development of Robot Scientist "Adam," which advances the automation of both. Adam has autonomously generated functional genomics hypotheses about the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and experimentally tested these hypotheses by using laboratory automation. We have confirmed Adam's conclusions through manual experiments. To describe Adam's research, we have developed an ontology and logical language. The resulting formalization involves over 10,000 different ... | |
|
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Vol. 104, No. 6. (6 February 2007), pp. 1777-1782.
by Natalie C. Duarte, Scott A. Becker, Neema Jamshidi, et al.Ines Thiele, Monica L. Mo, Thuy D. Vo, Rohith Srivas, Bernhard Ø. Palsson
posted by
14 people
JeremyZucker
pmendes
dadiamah
vpenelle
peterli
schwartzjmc
michaelbarton
dullhunk
guhjy
balajis
alexg
raiyar
noby
steinmetzlab
AbstractMetabolism is a vital cellular process, and its malfunction is a major contributor to human disease. Metabolic networks are complex and highly interconnected, and thus systems-level computational approaches are required to elucidate and understand metabolic genotype-phenotype relationships. We have manually reconstructed the global human metabolic network based on Build 35 of the genome annotation and a comprehensive evaluation of >50 years of legacy data (i.e., bibliomic data). Herein we describe the reconstruction process and demonstrate how the resulting genome-scale (or global) ... | |
|
Nature Biotechnology, Vol. 26, No. 3. (01 March 2008), pp. 303-304.
posted by
83 people
tomhebbron
vprieto
marekrud
slack---line
sensei2002
rossmounce
loopback007
edvin
frohike
krapnik
singhsh
Jporci
tnhh
ruvido
ucbcjbm
daforerog
Diego_Prada
abellogin
nguizard
thegoose2
arsyed
Zephyrus
flips
svozil
VGreiff
kaniko
ssgong
Yanno
guhjy
operon
barry
baaic
dullhunk
Bevan_Weir
zeji
gareth
massivemayhem
zwang
GustavoLacerda
GeeSharpMinor
bmaust
zambujo
mingzhi
starz1010101
maralena
wchannels
sunhwan
jennifermbui
kdelavega
zhouyu
rsantana
sobolevnrm
baker-group
fryanpan
kengg
rvosa
FAB-lab
dekay23
adacier
Bioinformatics
hpaces
waghsk
rchauhan
pavanghatty
kristgy
jfr
bibay2004
xingxu
quianominorleo
craigwilson06
ashko
markusd
dayjm
dimka
i-stevenson
chrissp100
tharris
ale
mjoach
HugoMarcelo
jdiezperezj
rrbarb
Nici
AbstractPrincipal component analysis is often incorporated into genome-wide expression studies, but what is it and how can it be used to explore high-dimensional data? ... | |
|
Nucl. Acids Res., Vol. 37, No. 1. (1 January 2009), pp. 1-13.
posted by
58 people
lipido
jmstat
alebalbin
sgsfak
kshameer
mayercd
bsamal
icecrown
natstreet
provero
psique
darian
chasmand
hzoltan
ipark-kaist
giovenko
lwaldron
jcaddy
antonkratz
Zephyrus
shikin
yaredo
tonamswish
ddunbar
robfsouza
Keywan
daforerog
ptrobajo
rdiaz
bertelsen
Bioinformatics - CRUK
Stew
inesdesantiago
heliopais
ConklinLab
AlexanderPico
aviad_work
ekotelnikova
frohike
aramesh2
jfr
zufar
ilyashl
dolchan
paszkows
lptolik
thomaskelder
AbnerCYH
neils
tmmurali
ealloza
barriot
druvus
renatomilani
pengchy
phoenixzxl
guhjy
sjcockell
AbstractFunctional analysis of large gene lists, derived in most cases from emerging high-throughput genomic, proteomic and bioinformatics scanning approaches, is still a challenging and daunting task. The gene-annotation enrichment analysis is a promising high-throughput strategy that increases the likelihood for investigators to identify biological processes most pertinent to their study. Approximately 68 bioinformatics enrichment tools that are currently available in the community are collected in this survey. Tools are uniquely categorized into three major classes, according to their underlying enrichment algorithms. ... | |
|
Nucleic acids research, Vol. 35, No. Web Server issue. (13 July 2007), pp. W182-185.
posted by
6 people
Akilah712
ajsferreira
JeremyZucker
karinlag
operon
sgoetz
AbstractThe number of complete and draft genomes is rapidly growing in recent years, and it has become increasingly important to automate the identification of functional properties and biological roles of genes in these genomes. In the KEGG database, genes in complete genomes are annotated with the KEGG orthology (KO) identifiers, or the K numbers, based on the best hit information using Smith-Waterman scores as well as by the manual curation. Each K number represents an ortholog group of genes, and it ... | |
|
Genome Res., Vol. 12, No. 10. (1 October 2002), pp. 1611-1618.
by Jason E. Stajich, David Block, Kris Boulez, et al.Steven E. Brenner, Stephen A. Chervitz, Chris Dagdigian, Georg Fuellen, James G. Gilbert, Ian Korf, Hilmar Lapp, Heikki Lehvaslaiho, Chad Matsalla, Chris J. Mungall, Brian I. Osborne, Matthew R. Pocock, Peter Schattner, Martin Senger, Lincoln D. Stein, Elia Stupka, Mark D. Wilkinson, Ewan Birney
posted by
30 people
akou
ludaesch
jsatkosk
kiekyon
Thaverkamp
Cortel
brdwilde
daforerog
GustavoLacerda
krapnik
jmeppley
chad_davis
rvosa
indigoviolet
skhadar
dullhunk
dgront
stajich
noby
incovoma
glycine
tyrosine
threonine
valine
nklee
EisenLab
FAB-lab
hpaces
sekmi
ninch
AbstractThe Bioperl project is an international open-source collaboration of biologists, bioinformaticians, and computer scientists that has evolved over the past 7 yr into the most comprehensive library of Perl modules available for managing and manipulating life-science information. Bioperl provides an easy-to-use, stable, and consistent programming interface for bioinformatics application programmers. The Bioperl modules have been successfully and repeatedly used to reduce otherwise complex tasks to only a few lines of code. The Bioperl object model has been proven to be flexible ... | |
|
Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series B (Methodological), Vol. 57, No. 1. (1995), pp. 289-300.
posted by
49 people
spores
sgoetz
flieder
jpkau
memming
arider1
Biostatistics
ctacmo
abrentnall
jperkins
CulCog
jlorent
zufar
bertelsen
Zephyrus
fisherp
michaelbarton
dakelley
lwaldron
polivares
brianb
ucbcjbm
jfr
xingxu
emptyhb
renewang
Yanno
sdvillal
druvus
natstreet
czeller
guhjy
RMGraze
oannes
vplagnol
frohike
grahamc
shigepong
ccr
axelon
ugengma
amsantos
Bioinformatics
Regulomics_UCHSC
rschulz
dragonrez
isimpson
vertikalist
BTS-PT-AS-CS
AbstractThe common approach to the multiplicity problem calls for controlling the familywise error rate (FWER). This approach, though, has faults, and we point out a few. A different approach to problems of multiple significance testing is presented. It calls for controlling the expected proportion of falsely rejected hypotheses-the false discovery rate. This error rate is equivalent to the FWER when all hypotheses are true but is smaller otherwise. Therefore, in problems where the control of the false discovery rate rather than ... | |
|
PLoS computational biology In PLoS Comput Biol, Vol. 5, No. 7. (31 July 2009), e1000424.
posted by
104 people
hroest
tomtullius
alebalbin
jamesmorris
codonusage
mawds
christianholz
flbarroso
Ilzins
mfenner
mittinatten
hryk
rossmounce
Bioinformatics
jfr
ekotelnikova
kevinchannon
icecrown
aprasad
okapi
abhishek_tiwari
agomez
songpku
shikin
kemamy2
chvlyl
freesci
dfdong
dutilh
leliavski
dgront
paulymer
FAB-lab
rvosa
installe
burak
annakcroft
brianb
nuin
skembel
pekrau
Sergey_gerbek
mordiano
remoteFuture
Yanno
Pedro Martinez EvoDevo lab Barcelona
aaltenburger
marekrud
guhjy
dolchan
frohike
operon
Orengo Group Journal Picks
CorinYeats
artaban421
antonkratz
tomhebbron
maren
bayesian
daveGerrard
JoeBanks
jcaddy
somak
bertelsen
ptrobajo
nperoni
daforerog
mmwoodman
charris5
GustavoLacerda
pmendes
fgibson
rdiaz
Zephyrus
heliopais
franklu310
lmichan
silberbauer
leemond31
jlangdon
robfsouza
Bioinformatics - CRUK
Stew
pmung
reyez
kshameer
djkt
pawelsobko
jjray
dswan
apaydin
renatomilani
VGreiff
cabbagesofdoom
ccsbs
wei_tang
fenghezi
BergmanLab
cisevol
structural_bioinformatics
McCammon
barry
sdaehne
druvus
| |
|
Genome research In Genome Research, Vol. 18, No. 5. (18 May 2008), pp. 821-829.
posted by
56 people
xueliangwei
nhp
fernan
fbristow
justinhjohnson
jts
dutilh
claire_jubin
danbolser
humburg
ajsferreira
vplagnol
bedo
jwhitney
cthachuk
hzoltan
azazello
ajbattle
jmanning2k
n00c
carlk
pachorip
APRegier
jbhiatt
jonilaserson
operon
jahwa
jsatkosk
sandfire
thegoose2
katholt
robsyme
djkt
hpaces
AaronDarling
mhz
idoerg
jmcq
Bioinformatics
dswan
dakelley
jasontsai
DeNovoAssembly-SIMR
acn
druvus
natstreet
nmohelli
stajich
Mycology
farhat
iris42
tharris
Neeperando
sharpton
GustavoLacerda
gdb
AbstractWe have developed a new set of algorithms, collectively called "Velvet," to manipulate de Bruijn graphs for genomic sequence assembly. A de Bruijn graph is a compact representation based on short words (k-mers) that is ideal for high coverage, very short read (25-50 bp) data sets. Applying Velvet to very short reads and paired-ends information only, one can produce contigs of significant length, up to 50-kb N50 length in simulations of prokaryotic data and 3-kb N50 on simulated mammalian BACs. When ... | |
|
Genome Research, Vol. 13, No. 9. (September 2003), pp. 2178-2189.
posted by
24 people
mtaschuk
jholder
rec3141
eeschmidt
FabienneGranier
cgaugain
GustavoLacerda
biomcgary
sjcockell
thegoose2
nlapalu
dullhunk
natstreet
druvus
C. elegans / WormBase
tharris
mdimmic
operon
indigoviolet
AaronDarling
bluto
EisenLab
maximilianh
ninch
Abstract10.1101/gr.1224503 The identification of orthologous groups is useful for genome annotation, studies on gene/protein evolution, comparative genomics, and the identification of taxonomically restricted sequences. Methods successfully exploited for prokaryotic genome analysis have proved difficult to apply to eukaryotes, however, as larger genomes may contain multiple paralogous genes, and sequence information is often incomplete. OrthoMCL provides a scalable method for constructing orthologous groups across multiple eukaryotic taxa, using a Markov Cluster algorithm to group (putative) ... | |
|
Nat Genet, Vol. 29, No. 4. (01 December 2001), pp. 365-371.
by Alvis Brazma, Pascal Hingamp, John Quackenbush, et al.Gavin Sherlock, Paul Spellman, Chris Stoeckert, John Aach, Wilhelm Ansorge, Catherine A. Ball, Helen C. Causton, Terry Gaasterland, Patrick Glenisson, Frank C. P. Holstege, Irene F. Kim, Victor Markowitz, John C. Matese, Helen Parkinson, Alan Robinson, Ugis Sarkans, Steffen Schulze-Kremer, Jason Stewart, Ronald Taylor, Jaak Vilo, Martin Vingron
posted by
19 people
frohike
mtaschuk
balajis
daforerog
idoerg
moonhouse
kittipat
irenas
setar
jandot
fisherp
jeremymiller
aconesa
sgoetz
dbk-lab
GeschwindLab
katerinakal
shikin
GeneGo
AbstractMicroarray analysis has become a widely used tool for the generation of gene expression data on a genomic scale. Although many significant results have been derived from microarray studies, one limitation has been the lack of standards for presenting and exchanging such data. Here we present a proposal, the Minimum Information About a Microarray Experiment (MIAME), that describes the minimum information required to ensure that microarray data can be easily interpreted and that results derived from its analysis can be independently ... | |
|
Bioinformatics (Oxford, England), Vol. 19, No. 4. (1 March 2003), pp. 524-531.
by M. Hucka, A. Finney, H. M. Sauro, et al.H. Bolouri, J. C. Doyle, H. Kitano, A. P. Arkin, B. J. Bornstein, D. Bray, A. Cornish-Bowden, A. A. Cuellar, S. Dronov, E. D. Gilles, M. Ginkel, V. Gor, I. I. Goryanin, W. J. Hedley, T. C. Hodgman, J-H H. Hofmeyr, P. J. Hunter, N. S. Juty, J. L. Kasberger, A. Kremling, U. Kummer, N. Le Novère, L. M. Loew, D. Lucio, P. Mendes, E. Minch, E. D. Mjolsness, Y. Nakayama, M. R. Nelson, P. F. Nielsen, T. Sakurada, J. C. Schaff, B. E. Shapiro, T. S. Shimizu, H. D. Spence, J. Stelling, K. Takahashi, M. Tomita, J. Wagner, J. Wang, SBML Forum
posted by
26 people
schwartzjmc
fbergmann
sstoma
jporternj
daforerog
Jiang Research Group
whitead
antonkratz
michaelbarton
allysonlister
rh020
shikin
subhacom
irenas
husain
easr
balajis
wnpx
jbchang
lenov
dbk-lab
nicholasflann
pmendes
csanford
AlexanderPico
dullhunk
AbstractMOTIVATION: Molecular biotechnology now makes it possible to build elaborate systems models, but the systems biology community needs information standards if models are to be shared, evaluated and developed cooperatively. RESULTS: We summarize the Systems Biology Markup Language (SBML) Level 1, a free, open, XML-based format for representing biochemical reaction networks. SBML is a software-independent language for describing models common to research in many areas of computational biology, including cell signaling pathways, metabolic pathways, gene regulation, and others. AVAILABILITY: The specification ... | |
|
Science, Vol. 297, No. 5586. (30 August 2002), pp. 1551-1555.
posted by
33 people
adampah
ganden
feshbach
cn_honjyo
haewoon
Scis0000002
schwartzjmc
zufar
deanmalmgren
diamantis
shivaram
alexg
yish
wnpx
ddahlem
neveaire
bigbossman
griota
jeremymiller
natstreet
karfunkel
Biostatistics
Computational-Genomics
Bioinformatics
mathgamespatterns
Neuroscience
dtl
vds-arg
eni
GeschwindLab
Evangelia
stefanoallesina
iris_2001
Abstract10.1126/science.1073374 ... | |
|
Nucleic Acids Res, Vol. 35, No. Database issue. (January 2007)
posted by
17 people
anf
dragonrez
druvus
Cortel
wenhui
chad_davis
guhjy
kuhn
balajis
fisherp
raiyar
massivemayhem
larsjuhljensen
higueruelo
renatomilani
carlk
bicko
AbstractInformation on protein-protein interactions is still mostly limited to a small number of model organisms, and originates from a wide variety of experimental and computational techniques. The database and online resource STRING generalizes access to protein interaction data, by integrating known and predicted interactions from a variety of sources. The underlying infrastructure includes a consistent body of completely sequenced genomes and exhaustive orthology classifications, based on which interaction evidence is transferred between organisms. Although primarily developed for protein interaction analysis, the ... | |
|
BMC genomics, Vol. 10, No. 1. (2009), 22.
by Damian Smedley, Syed Haider, Benoit Ballester, et al.Richard Holland, Darin London, Gudmundur Thorisson, Arek Kasprzyk
posted by
40 people
mordiano
klauso
Yanno
nuin
agomez
bsamal
aaltenburger
artaban421
sjcockell
lmichan
jdbowes
fgibson
pekrau
gangcai
daforerog
jfr
fisherp
allysonlister
Bioinformatics - CRUK
Stew
grahamc
Bioinformatics
dswan
Roswell Cancer Crosstalk
Zephyrus
renatomilani
guhjy
natstreet
pablocarb
Cortel
dbk
mitko
brianb
ajaymalik
neils
kshameer
dullhunk
druvus
BergmanLab
cisevol
AbstractBACKGROUND: Biologists need to perform complex queries, often across a variety of databases. Typically, each data resource provides an advanced query interface, each of which must be learnt by the biologist before they can begin to query them. Frequently, more than one data source is required and for high-throughput analysis, cutting and pasting results between websites is certainly very time consuming. Therefore, many groups rely on local bioinformatics support to process queries by accessing the resource's programmatic interfaces if they exist. ... | |
|
Nature, Vol. 420, No. 6912. (14 November 2002), pp. 206-210.
posted by
36 people
jthorniley
junjie
dagmar
dadiamah
schwartzjmc
jporternj
tom4m3
schmidtm
jaimie
nedwards
dansullivanblk
Jarman Lab
ggallone
daforerog
reyez
frohike
irenas
rhem1224
lyongu
eweaver
wnpx
ddahlem
shivakumar3_14
os252
dgront
mmt
livingthingdan
agileproteomics
grahamc
dbk-lab
TCR_Signaling
SysbioMPI-TCells
livingthing
maburkitt
shikin
GeneGo
AbstractTo understand complex biological systems requires the integration of experimental and computational research -- in other words a systems biology approach. Computational biology, through pragmatic modelling and theoretical exploration, provides a powerful foundation from which to address critical scientific questions head-on. The reviews in this Insight cover many different aspects of this energetic field, although all, in one way or another, illuminate the functioning of modular circuits, including their robustness, design and manipulation. Computational systems biology addresses questions fundamental to our ... | |
|
Nature In Nature, Vol. 437, No. 7057. (15 September 2005), pp. 376-380.
by Marcel Margulies, Michael Egholm, William E. Altman, et al.Said Attiya, Joel S. Bader, Lisa A. Bemben, Jan Berka, Michael S. Braverman, Yi-Ju J. Chen, Zhoutao Chen, Scott B. Dewell, Lei Du, Joseph M. Fierro, Xavier V. Gomes, Brian C. Godwin, Wen He, Scott Helgesen, Chun Heen H. Ho, Chun He H. Ho, Gerard P. Irzyk, Szilveszter C. Jando, Maria L. Alenquer, Thomas P. Jarvie, Kshama B. Jirage, Jong-Bum B. Kim, James R. Knight, Janna R. Lanza, John H. Leamon, Steven M. Lefkowitz, Ming Lei, Jing Li, Kenton L. Lohman, Hong Lu, Vinod B. Makhijani, Keith E. McDade, Michael P. McKenna, Eugene W. Myers, Elizabeth Nickerson, John R. Nobile, Ramona Plant, Bernard P. Puc, Michael T. Ronan, George T. Roth, Gary J. Sarkis, Jan Fredrik F. Simons, John W. Simpson, Maithreyan Srinivasan, Karrie R. Tartaro, Alexander Tomasz, Kari A. Vogt, Greg A. Volkmer, Shally H. Wang, Yong Wang, Michael P. Weiner, Pengguang Yu, Richard F. Begley, Jonathan M. Rothberg
posted by
49 people
chriswillmott
dutilh
orzenil
heliopais
Dbarker06
n00c
rshe
seb1
pachorip
katiehumphry
jonilaserson
michaelbarton
sandfire
natstreet
daforerog
idoerg
mmartin
azazello
jbhiatt
alessandrobrozzi
leechuck
bjorns
dayjm
jmeppley
arve
RMGraze
JAShapiro
balajis
cdawson
AaronDarling
treangen
usagi-kirin
beatrizfernandez
wenhan
xingxu
erbon
Microbial-Ecology
GIG
gatech-compgenomics
tpreeprem
farhat
carpi
bpb
mcox
GustavoLacerda
jlgreen
Green Lab
iSEEM
kieran101
AbstractThe proliferation of large-scale DNA-sequencing projects in recent years has driven a search for alternative methods to reduce time and cost. Here we describe a scalable, highly parallel sequencing system with raw throughput significantly greater than that of state-of-the-art capillary electrophoresis instruments. The apparatus uses a novel fibre-optic slide of individual wells and is able to sequence 25 million bases, at 99% or better accuracy, in one four-hour run. To achieve an approximately 100-fold increase in throughput over current Sanger sequencing ... | |
|
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Vol. 95, No. 25. (8 December 1998), pp. 14863-14868.
posted by
42 people
vjethava
frohike
ottermanns
npozo
antonkratz
potatongy
drungows
colmryan
jplatig
rsaito
Neeperando
baldigroup
daforerog
karinlag
ronglais
operon
Borelli
pengchy
macowell
ggrot
miguel
textoris
okarsligil
pcahan1
lfriedl
balajis
nuke2005
lyongu
maryee
wnpx
nirfriedman
dquest
karfunkel
kdl
Bioinformatics
BUiGEM
dps
kintoki
jo_davies
tvdbulck
bozdagd
roys
AbstractA system of cluster analysis for genome-wide expression data from DNA microarray hybridization is described that uses standard statistical algorithms to arrange genes according to similarity in pattern of gene expression. The output is displayed graphically, conveying the clustering and the underlying expression data simultaneously in a form intuitive for biologists. We have found in the budding yeast that clustering gene expression data groups together efficiently genes of known similar function, and we find a similar tendency in human data. ... | |
|
Brief Bioinform, Vol. 8, No. 2. (1 March 2007), pp. 109-116.
posted by
26 people
phoenixzxl
dfdong
daforerog
shikin
jb44
gamberina
tonamswish
red446
svozil
VGreiff
guhjy
Borelli
jfr
wnpx
neveaire
zwang
bertelsen
cabbagezs
Bioinformatics
julesyoo
blobbybirdman
hpaces
vietanh0
waszak
i-stevenson
quianominorleo
AbstractBayesian methods are valuable, inter alia, whenever there is a need to extract information from data that are uncertain or subject to any kind of error or noise (including measurement error and experimental error, as well as noise or random variation intrinsic to the process of interest). Bayesian methods offer a number of advantages over more conventional statistical techniques that make them particularly appropriate for complex data. It is therefore no surprise that Bayesian methods are becoming more widely used in ... | |
|
Bioinformatics (Oxford, England), Vol. 25, No. 11. (1 June 2009), pp. 1470-1471.
posted by
17 people
jfr
Thaverkamp
daforerog
Vincent_Rouilly
kiara
coela
guhjy
dolchan
neils
VGreiff
nuin
chrisamiller
renatomilani
jmeppley
natstreet
phoenixzxl
druvus
AbstractMOTIVATION: KEGG PATHWAY is a service of Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG), constructing manually curated pathway maps that represent current knowledge on biological networks in graph models. While valuable graph tools have been implemented in R/Bioconductor, to our knowledge there is currently no software package to parse and analyze KEGG pathways with graph theory. RESULTS: We introduce the software package KEGGgraph in R and Bioconductor, an interface between KEGG pathways and graph models as well as a collection of ... | |
|
Genome research, Vol. 12, No. 4. (1 April 2002), pp. 656-664.
posted by
41 people
azazello
rshe
dchughes
rdowell
LabDros
gwallau
druvus
aprasad
maria_hauser
n00c
sficklin
Thaverkamp
cpwardell
BergmanLab
daveGerrard
coela
daforerog
pwais
umit
mmartin
paszkows
operon
miguel
pcahan1
Ayest
indigoviolet
mtagaya
treangen
michC
djkt
timflutre
olympos
cjeans
wenhan
natstreet
antonkratz
EisenLab
yoanjacquemin
talponer
bozdagd
gpappas
AbstractAnalyzing vertebrate genomes requires rapid mRNA/DNA and cross-species protein alignments. A new tool, BLAT, is more accurate and 500 times faster than popular existing tools for mRNA/DNA alignments and 50 times faster for protein alignments at sensitivity settings typically used when comparing vertebrate sequences. BLAT's speed stems from an index of all nonoverlapping K-mers in the genome. This index fits inside the RAM of inexpensive computers, and need only be computed once for each genome assembly. BLAT has several major stages. ... | |
|
Genome research, Vol. 12, No. 10. (October 2002), pp. 1599-1610.
by Lincoln D. Stein, Christopher Mungall, ShengQiang Shu, et al.Michael Caudy, Marco Mangone, Allen Day, Elizabeth Nickerson, Jason E. Stajich, Todd W. Harris, Adrian Arva, Suzanna Lewis
posted by
15 people
bertelsen
rshe
inesdesantiago
Scis0000002
thegoose2
taroleo
Cortel
indigoviolet
dquest
stajich
natstreet
EisenLab
dullhunk
tharris
farhat
AbstractThe Generic Model Organism System Database Project (GMOD) seeks to develop reusable software components for model organism system databases. In this paper we describe the Generic Genome Browser (GBrowse), a Web-based application for displaying genomic annotations and other features. For the end user, features of the browser include the ability to scroll and zoom through arbitrary regions of a genome, to enter a region of the genome by searching for a landmark or performing a full text search of all features, ... | |
|
Nucl. Acids Res., Vol. 34, No. suppl_2. (1 July 2006), pp. W729-732.
by Duncan Hull, Katy Wolstencroft, Robert Stevens, et al.Carole Goble, Mathew R. Pocock, Peter Li, Tom Oinn
posted by
24 people
nicklynch
melle_
perkeo
brygg
fisherp
barriot
bertelsen
egonw
vijyendra
pekrau
peterli
tjtaylor
Cortel
guhjy
shikin
daforerog
druvus
moborg
wnpx
asddd
mroos
AID
dullhunk
alanrw
AbstractTaverna is an application that eases the use and integration of the growing number of molecular biology tools and databases available on the web, especially web services. It allows bioinformaticians to construct workflows or pipelines of services to perform a range of different analyses, such as sequence analysis and genome annotation. These high-level workflows can integrate many different resources into a single analysis. Taverna is available freely under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL) from http://taverna.sourceforge.net/. 10.1093/nar/gkl320 ... | |
|
BMC Genomics, Vol. 9, No. 1. (08 February 2008), 75.
by Ramy Aziz, Daniela Bartels, Aaron Best, et al.Matthew DeJongh, Terrence Disz, Robert Edwards, Kevin Formsma, Svetlana Gerdes, Elizabeth Glass, Michael Kubal, Folker Meyer, Gary Olsen, Robert Olson, Andrei Osterman, Ross Overbeek, Leslie McNeil, Daniel Paarmann, Tobias Paczian, Bruce Parrello, Gordon Pusch, Claudia Reich, Rick Stevens, Olga Vassieva, Veronika Vonstein, Andreas Wilke, Olga Zagnitko
posted by
14 people
chica
karinlag
Waikato - Erebus
hexaquo
azazello
sgoetz
stefanorb
coela
Thaverkamp
barriot
druvus
JeremyZucker
klager
MetabolicModeling
AbstractBACKGROUND:The number of prokaryotic genome sequences becoming available is growing steadily and is growing faster than our ability to accurately annotate them.DESCRIPTION:We describe a fully automated service for annotating bacterial and archaeal genomes. The service identifies protein-encoding, rRNA and tRNA genes, assigns functions to the genes, predicts which subsystems are represented in the genome, uses this information to reconstruct the metabolic network and makes the output easily downloadable for the user. In addition, the annotated genome can be browsed in an ... | |
|
Nucleic acids research, Vol. 33, No. Database issue. (1 January 2005)
by G. Joshi-Tope, M. Gillespie, I. Vastrik, et al.P. D'Eustachio, E. Schmidt, B. de Bono, B. Jassal, G. R. Gopinath, G. R. Wu, L. Matthews, S. Lewis, E. Birney, L. Stein
posted by
13 people
daforerog
fisherp
reyez
aalibes
kuhn
yas
dullhunk
duartemolha
massivemayhem
cerami
T_lab
yggdrasil
guhjy
AbstractReactome, located at http://www.reactome.org is a curated, peer-reviewed resource of human biological processes. Given the genetic makeup of an organism, the complete set of possible reactions constitutes its reactome. The basic unit of the Reactome database is a reaction; reactions are then grouped into causal chains to form pathways. The Reactome data model allows us to represent many diverse processes in the human system, including the pathways of intermediary metabolism, regulatory pathways, and signal transduction, and high-level processes, such as the ... | |
|
Bioinformatics, Vol. 23, No. 8. (15 April 2007), pp. 980-987.
posted by
25 people
vkwn
mayercd
hzoltan
zufar
srp33
bertelsen
jperkins
ptrobajo
VGreiff
tonamswish
ipark-kaist
aramesh2
ydhwang
shikin
raiyar
SIMR bioinformatics
ghattem
jfr
ealloza
shigepong
BioinfoCIPF
heliopais
guhjy
diging_data
BTS-PT-AS-CS
AbstractMotivation: Many statistical tests have been proposed in recent years for analyzing gene expression data in terms of gene sets, usually from Gene Ontology. These methods are based on widely different methodological assumptions. Some approaches test differential expression of each gene set against differential expression of the rest of the genes, whereas others test each gene set on its own. Also, some methods are based on a model in which the genes are the sampling units, whereas others treat the subjects ... | |
|
Nature biotechnology, Vol. 25, No. 11. (07 November 2007), pp. 1251-1255.
by Barry Smith, Michael Ashburner, Cornelius Rosse, et al.Jonathan Bard, William Bug, Werner Ceusters, Louis J. Goldberg, Karen Eilbeck, Amelia Ireland, Christopher J. Mungall, OBI Consortium, Neocles Leontis, Philippe Rocca-Serra, Alan Ruttenberg, Susanna-Assunta A. Sansone, Richard H. Scheuermann, Nigam Shah, Patricia L. Whetzel, Suzanna Lewis
posted by
32 people
fbergmann
MDR
alemhnan
bertelsen
jonathancooper
mtaschuk
vkwn
beanformer
druvus
mqbphcw3
richardbickerton
CameronNeylon
nicklynch
Scis0000002
jorisslob
allysonlister
tmmurali
jfr
dullhunk
jandot
cjeans
leechuck
sgoetz
PunkRock
sobolevnrm
lenov
baker-group
AlexanderPico
dansullivanblk
dagmar
marck
fgibson
AbstractThe value of any kind of data is greatly enhanced when it exists in a form that allows it to be integrated with other data. One approach to integration is through the annotation of multiple bodies of data using common controlled vocabularies or 'ontologies'. Unfortunately, the very success of this approach has led to a proliferation of ontologies, which itself creates obstacles to integration. The Open Biomedical Ontologies (OBO) consortium is pursuing a strategy to overcome this problem. Existing OBO ontologies, ... | |
|
Nucleic acids research, Vol. 37, No. Web Server issue. (1 July 2009), pp. W23-27.
posted by
22 people
spores
unidodo
Yanno
isimpson
BergmanLab
cisevol
brianb
sjcockell
n00c
stharward
VGreiff
nuin
joergkurtwegner
natstreet
druvus
dullhunk
H-Arrietaumn
Zephyrus
guhjy
daforerog
neils
renatomilani
AbstractBioMart Central Portal (www.biomart.org) offers a one-stop shop solution to access a wide array of biological databases. These include major biomolecular sequence, pathway and annotation databases such as Ensembl, Uniprot, Reactome, HGNC, Wormbase and PRIDE; for a complete list, visit, http://www.biomart.org/biomart/martview. Moreover, the web server features seamless data federation making cross querying of these data sources in a user friendly and unified way. The web server not only provides access through a web interface (MartView), it also supports programmatic access through ... | |
|
Science, Vol. 302, No. 5644. (17 October 2003), pp. 449-453.
by Ronald Jansen, Haiyuan Yu, Dov Greenbaum, et al.Yuval Kluger, Nevan J. Krogan, Sambath Chung, Andrew Emili, Michael Snyder, Jack F. Greenblatt, Mark Gerstein
posted by
27 people
cjm
rsaito
cerca
hagechouchin443
aelef
Robinder
lfriedl
balajis
opheliav
yuval
wnpx
nickluscombe
ruvido
raiyar
massivemayhem
kdang
dbgrant
nedwards
karfunkel
kdl
EBI-regulation
Evangelia
shung
phoenixzxl
penpen926
carlk
frohike
AbstractWe have developed an approach using Bayesian networks to predict protein-protein interactions genome-wide in yeast. Our method naturally weights and combines into reliable predictions genomic features only weakly associated with interaction (e.g., messenger RNAcoexpression, coessentiality, and colocalization). In addition to de novo predictions, it can integrate often noisy, experimental interaction data sets. We observe that at given levels of sensitivity, our predictions are more accurate than the existing high-throughput experimental data sets. We validate our predictions with TAP (tandem affinity purification) ... | |
|
Molecular systems biology, Vol. 3 (13 February 2007)
posted by
49 people
engelhardt
sgsfak
giovenko
icecrown
jmstat
sarikamehra
frohike
Jporci
beete
tonamswish
zufar
nicholasflann
icq242500260
guhjy
Zephyrus
antonkratz
phoenixzxl
bertelsen
isimpson
daforerog
poirel
agonzale
roys
Neeperando
APRegier
rdiaz
klo
Borelli
Jarman Lab
ggallone
ptrobajo
druvus
cswinburne
jfr
eckart_bindewald
wnpx
nickluscombe
kengg
mikaelhuss
jrbanga
BIBLIOma
RockHI
lp2
natstreet
EBI-regulation
Plantandetc
heliopais
mariakmejia
tmmurali
AbstractInferring, or 'reverse-engineering', gene networks can be defined as the process of identifying gene interactions from experimental data through computational analysis. Gene expression data from microarrays are typically used for this purpose. Here we compared different reverse-engineering algorithms for which ready-to-use software was available and that had been tested on experimental data sets. We show that reverse-engineering algorithms are indeed able to correctly infer regulatory interactions among genes, at least when one performs perturbation experiments complying with the algorithm requirements. These ... | |
|
Genome Biology, Vol. 9, No. 12. (17 December 2008), 114.
posted by
20 people
GustavoLacerda
agomez
allysonlister
jfr
ilyashl
imaginatio
VGreiff
renatomilani
Roswell Cancer Crosstalk
Zephyrus
idoerg
Yanno
dandaman
klo
reyez
dullhunk
fgibson
neils
kshameer
druvus
AbstractBioinformatics has become too central to biology to be left to specialist bioinformaticians. Biologists are all bioinformaticians now. ... | |
|
Brief Bioinform In Brief Bioinform, Vol. 9, No. 1. (1 January 2008), pp. 75-90.
posted by
15 people
beanformer
gthorisson
druvus
vkwn
daforerog
mitko
bertelsen
guhjy
jfr
dullhunk
RockHI
dbmi-nlp
wchapman
dansullivanblk
sgoetz
AbstractThe information explosion in biology makes it difficult for researchers to stay abreast of current biomedical knowledge and to make sense of the massive amounts of online information. Ontologies--specifications of the entities, their attributes and relationships among the entities in a domain of discourse--are increasingly enabling biomedical researchers to accomplish these tasks. In fact, bio-ontologies are beginning to proliferate in step with accruing biological data. The myriad of ontologies being created enables researchers not only to solve some of the problems ... | |
|
Bioinformatics, Vol. 25, No. 9. (1 May 2009), pp. 1118-1124.
by Tobias Rausch, Sergey Koren, Gennady Denisov, et al.David Weese, Anne-Katrin Emde, Andreas Doring, Knut Reinert
posted by
27 people
dutilh
jonilaserson
justinhjohnson
orzenil
humburg
jfr
azazello
hzoltan
cthachuk
GustavoLacerda
jasontsai
n00c
nuin
dakelley
skembel
Thaverkamp
reyez
TRHvidsten
iSEEM
djkt
Bioinformatics
hpaces
APRegier
pengchy
natstreet
druvus
darian
AbstractMotivation: Novel high-throughput sequencing technologies pose new algorithmic challenges in handling massive amounts of short-read, high-coverage data. A robust and versatile consensus tool is of particular interest for such data since a sound multi-read alignment is a prerequisite for variation analyses, accurate genome assemblies and insert sequencing. Results: A multi-read alignment algorithm for de novo or reference-guided genome assembly is presented. The program identifies segments shared by multiple reads and then aligns these segments using a consistency-enhanced alignment graph. On ... | |
|
Nature, Vol. 433, No. 7028. (24 February 2005), pp. 895-900.
posted by
30 people
shikin
botonne
schwartzjmc
tomt21
lawraga
Scis0000002
vtraag
cgaugain
pdelosri
cswinburne
camster
dbk
BioGeek
Borelli
lfriedl
balajis
alexg
eweaver
tny
wnpx
cjeans
kdang
carlk
RobMills
streptomyces
dbk-lab
kdl
Bioinformatics
Diego_Prada
marcio
AbstractHigh-throughput techniques are leading to an explosive growth in the size of biological databases and creating the opportunity to revolutionize our understanding of life and disease. Interpretation of these data remains, however, a major scientific challenge. Here, we propose a methodology that enables us to extract and display information contained in complex networks. Specifically, we demonstrate that we can find functional modules in complex networks, and classify nodes into universal roles according to their pattern of intra- and inter-module connections. The ... | |
|
Nature biotechnology, Vol. 26, No. 5. (08 May 2008), pp. 541-547.
by Dawn Field, George Garrity, Tanya Gray, et al.Norman Morrison, Jeremy Selengut, Peter Sterk, Tatiana Tatusova, Nicholas Thomson, Michael J. Allen, Samuel V. Angiuoli, Michael Ashburner, Nelson Axelrod, Sandra Baldauf, Stuart Ballard, Jeffrey Boore, Guy Cochrane, James Cole, Peter Dawyndt, Paul De Vos, Claude DePamphilis, Robert Edwards, Nadeem Faruque, Robert Feldman, Jack Gilbert, Paul Gilna, Frank Oliver O. Glöckner, Philip Goldstein, Robert Guralnick, Dan Haft, David Hancock, Henning Hermjakob, Christiane Hertz-Fowler, Phil Hugenholtz, Ian Joint, Leonid Kagan, Matthew Kane, Jessie Kennedy, George Kowalchuk, Renzo Kottmann, Eugene Kolker, Saul Kravitz, Nikos Kyrpides, Jim Leebens-Mack, Suzanna E. Lewis, Kelvin Li, Allyson L. Lister, Phillip Lord, Natalia Maltsev, Victor Markowitz, Jennifer Martiny, Barbara Methe, Ilene Mizrachi, Richard Moxon, Karen Nelson, Julian Parkhill, Lita Proctor, Owen White, Susanna-Assunta A. Sansone, Andrew Spiers, Robert Stevens, Paul Swift, Chris Taylor, Yoshio Tateno, Adrian Tett, Sarah Turner, David Ussery, Bob Vaughan, Naomi Ward, Trish Whetzel, Ingio San Gil, Gareth Wilson, Anil Wipat
posted by
19 people
michaelbarton
natstreet
druvus
barriot
balajis
thegoose2
idoerg
Thaverkamp
sconlan
microbiology_nijmegen
Katje
allysonlister
jmeppley
dullhunk
guhjy
tharris
jamselem
neils
jfr
AbstractWith the quantity of genomic data increasing at an exponential rate, it is imperative that these data be captured electronically, in a standard format. Standardization activities must proceed within the auspices of open-access and international working bodies. To tackle the issues surrounding the development of better descriptions of genomic investigations, we have formed the Genomic Standards Consortium (GSC). Here, we introduce the minimum information about a genome sequence (MIGS) specification with the intent of promoting participation in its development and discussing ... | |
|
Nature In Nature, Vol. 444, No. 7118. (23 November 2006), pp. 444-454.
by Richard Redon, Shumpei Ishikawa, Karen R. Fitch, et al.Lars Feuk, George H. Perry, T. Daniel Andrews, Heike Fiegler, Michael H. Shapero, Andrew R. Carson, Wenwei Chen, Eun Kyung K. Cho, Stephanie Dallaire, Jennifer L. Freeman, Juan R. González, Mònica Gratacòs, Jing Huang, Dimitrios Kalaitzopoulos, Daisuke Komura, Jeffrey R. MacDonald, Christian R. Marshall, Rui Mei, Lyndal Montgomery, Kunihiro Nishimura, Kohji Okamura, Fan Shen, Martin J. Somerville, Joelle Tchinda, Armand Valsesia, Cara Woodwark, Fengtang Yang, Junjun Zhang, Tatiana Zerjal, Jane Zhang, Lluis Armengol, Donald F. Conrad, Xavier Estivill, Chris Tyler-Smith, Nigel P. Carter, Hiroyuki Aburatani, Charles Lee, Keith W. Jones, Stephen W. Scherer, Matthew E. Hurles
posted by
54 people
alefox
lindenb
shigepong
shikin
n00c
sameersoi
lp2
ilyashl
ajbattle
darian
jonilaserson
jrvalcourt
turnersd
guhjy
daforerog
noushin
Glires
ivanek
waszak
jo_davies
parkinson's disease references
psique
bpb
jfr
balajis
pradiptaray
dpollard
mtagaya
adepace
aswin
rdiaz
qfwills
ealloza
vplagnol
giovanni
jeremymiller
frohike
vpschulz
raiyar
ramensky
ccr
azazello
dbgrant
colinveal
xingxu
Bioinformatics
EisenLab
BioinfoCIPF
GeschwindLab
steinmetzlab
MBLAB
srp33
Ema
daed
AbstractCopy number variation (CNV) of DNA sequences is functionally significant but has yet to be fully ascertained. We have constructed a first-generation CNV map of the human genome through the study of 270 individuals from four populations with ancestry in Europe, Africa or Asia (the HapMap collection). DNA from these individuals was screened for CNV using two complementary technologies: single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotyping arrays, and clone-based comparative genomic hybridization. A total of 1,447 copy number variable regions (CNVRs), which can encompass ... | |
|
BMC Bioinformatics, Vol. 9, No. 1. (2008), 82.
posted by
22 people
Ilzins
reyez
antonkratz
daforerog
treangen
natstreet
nlapalu
druvus
jamselem
dullhunk
laughcry
ibuch
urgi
sci91078
renatomilani
xili03
phoenixzxl
guhjy
chad_davis
barry
Bioinformatics
structural_bioinformatics
AbstractBACKGROUND:The performance of different programming languages has previously been benchmarked using abstract mathematical algorithms, but not using standard bioinformatics algorithms. We compared the memory usage and speed of execution for three standard bioinformatics methods, implemented in programs using one of six different programming languages. Programs for the Sellers algorithm, the Neighbor-Joining tree construction algorithm and an algorithm for parsing BLAST file outputs were implemented in C, C++, C#, Java, Perl and Python.RESULTS:Implementations in C and C++ were fastest and used the ... | |
|
Science (New York, N.Y.), Vol. 322, No. 5907. (5 December 2008), pp. 1511-1516.
by A. A. Cohen, N. Geva-Zatorsky, E. Eden, et al.M. Frenkel-Morgenstern, I. Issaeva, A. Sigal, R. Milo, C. Cohen-Saidon, Y. Liron, Z. Kam, L. Cohen, T. Danon, N. Perzov, U. Alon
posted by
18 people
SynBioSys
sbottani
tienholin
agonzale
VGreiff
tjchen
myzhang
brianb
Borelli
lflorez
jessopher
reyez
jbhiatt
caseybrown
winterschlaefer
sjcockell
renatomilani
pengchy
AbstractWhy do seemingly identical cells respond differently to a drug? To address this, we studied the dynamics and variability of the protein response of human cancer cells to a chemotherapy drug, camptothecin. We present a dynamic-proteomics approach that measures the levels and locations of nearly 1000 different endogenously tagged proteins in individual living cells at high temporal resolution. All cells show rapid translocation of proteins specific to the drug mechanism, including the drug target (topoisomerase-1), and slower, wide-ranging temporal waves of ... | |
|
PLoS genetics, Vol. 5, No. 4. (24 April 2009), e1000459.
posted by
28 people
torfinnnome
justinhjohnson
provero
hzoltan
Zephyrus
antonkratz
bertelsen
frohike
natstreet
guhjy
gdb
giovenko
galka8_diploma
aditi9783
daforerog
ealloza
RockmanLab
dpollard
hrogers
coela
ilyashl
fenghezi
reyez
maximilianh
giovanni
djkt
Mycology
stajich
AbstractThe majority of the genome in animals and plants is transcribed in a developmentally regulated manner to produce large numbers of non-protein-coding RNAs (ncRNAs), whose incidence increases with developmental complexity. There is growing evidence that these transcripts are functional, particularly in the regulation of epigenetic processes, leading to the suggestion that they compose a hitherto hidden layer of genomic programming in humans and other complex organisms. However, to date, very few have been identified in genetic screens. Here I show that ... | |
|
Nature biotechnology In Nat Biotech, Vol. 26, No. 10. (09 October 2008), pp. 1135-1145.
posted by
60 people
balajis
Yanno
roedelsberg
jame0taylor
viren4388
klauso
bertelsen
tux2000
JamesBarger
darian
burak
Jporci
daforerog
dchughes
hzoltan
cthachuk
giovenko
heliopais
seb1
installe
niallhaslam
Vincent_Rouilly
rschulz
fishtank
bluto
Annab
katholt
jmcq
michaelbarton
n00c
jfr
dna
nzm
farhat
idoerg
mhz
mmartin
jbhiatt
yupu
Bioinformatics
behindtherabbit
guhjy
Pascalichouchou
frohike
dakelley
ptrobajo
zwang
Roswell Cancer Crosstalk
Zephyrus
psique
natstreet
druvus
nuin
alexknight
reyez
dbk
Oxford Virology
wsjames
pengchy
GeeSharpMinor
AbstractDNA sequence represents a single format onto which a broad range of biological phenomena can be projected for high-throughput data collection. Over the past three years, massively parallel DNA sequencing platforms have become widely available, reducing the cost of DNA sequencing by over two orders of magnitude, and democratizing the field by putting the sequencing capacity of a major genome center in the hands of individual investigators. These new technologies are rapidly evolving, and near-term challenges include the development of robust ... | |
|
Nature methods, Vol. 5, No. 7. (01 July 2008), pp. 585-587.
by Jay Shendure
posted by
20 people
balajis
GustavoLacerda
n00c
jmcq
inesdesantiago
burak
sdvillal
VGreiff
Borelli
bertelsen
annaprotasio
sanchezbuelna
orzenil
frohike
myourshaw
ChrisEvelo
megraw
kengg
marck
kintoki
AbstractTwo complementary approaches, both using next-generation sequencing, have successfully tackled the scale and the complexity of mammalian transcriptomes, at once revealing unprecedented detail and allowing better quantification. ... | |
|
Genome research, Vol. 18, No. 5. (13 May 2008), pp. 810-820.
by Jonathan Butler, Iain MacCallum, Michael Kleber, et al.Ilya A. Shlyakhter, Matthew K. Belmonte, Eric S. Lander, Chad Nusbaum, David B. Jaffe
posted by
27 people
farhat
xueliangwei
ajsferreira
n00c
carlk
jmanning2k
APRegier
pachorip
jonilaserson
operon
thegoose2
natstreet
AaronDarling
mhz
dakelley
druvus
stajich
azazello
hpaces
Mycology
tharris
jwhitney
iris42
Neeperando
sharpton
GustavoLacerda
GeeSharpMinor
AbstractNew DNA sequencing technologies deliver data at dramatically lower costs but demand new analytical methods to take full advantage of the very short reads that they produce. We provide an initial, theoretical solution to the challenge of de novo assembly from whole-genome shotgun "microreads." For 11 genomes of sizes up to 39 Mb, we generated high-quality assemblies from 80x coverage by paired 30-base simulated reads modeled after real Illumina-Solexa reads. The bacterial genomes of Campylobacter jejuni and Escherichia coli assemble optimally, ... | |
|
BMC Bioinformatics, Vol. 4, No. 1. (11 September 2003), 41.
by Roman Tatusov, Natalie Fedorova, John Jackson, et al.Aviva Jacobs, Boris Kiryutin, Eugene Koonin, Dmitri Krylov, Raja Mazumder, Sergei Mekhedov, Anastasia Nikolskaya, B. Sridhar Rao, Sergei Smirnov, Alexander Sverdlov, Sona Vasudevan, Yuri Wolf, Jodie Yin, Darren Natale
posted by
17 people
aceol
sjcockell
thegoose2
cgaugain
coela
guhjy
C. elegans / WormBase
tharris
dmp
arve
indigoviolet
j3xucite
treangen
bluto
EisenLab
westoll
natstreet
AbstractBACKGROUND:The availability of multiple, essentially complete genome sequences of prokaryotes and eukaryotes spurred both the demand and the opportunity for the construction of an evolutionary classification of genes from these genomes. Such a classification system based on orthologous relationships between genes appears to be a natural framework for comparative genomics and should facilitate both functional annotation of genomes and large-scale evolutionary studies.RESULTS:We describe here a major update of the previously developed system for delineation of Clusters of Orthologous Groups of proteins ... | |
|
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Vol. 102, No. 38. (20 September 2005), pp. 13544-13549.
posted by
15 people
bertelsen
zufar
yaredo
VGreiff
daforerog
ipark-kaist
dragonrez
maryee
ealloza
frohike
justescaped
BioinfoCIPF
srp33
giovenko
heliopais
AbstractAccurate and rapid identification of perturbed pathways through the analysis of genome-wide expression profiles facilitates the generation of biological hypotheses. We propose a statistical framework for determining whether a specified group of genes for a pathway has a coordinated association with a phenotype of interest. Several issues on proper hypothesis-testing procedures are clarified. In particular, it is shown that the differences in the correlation structure of each set of genes can lead to a biased comparison among gene sets unless a ... | |
|
BMC bioinformatics, Vol. 10, No. 1. (2009), 161.
posted by
19 people
tonamswish
heliopais
Thaverkamp
bertelsen
dipenps
sotacam
GustavoLacerda
guhjy
Bioinformatics
dswan
ptrobajo
VGreiff
thegoose
vinithepooh
kshameer
renatomilani
cassj
Mycology
stajich
AbstractBACKGROUND: Gene set analysis (GSA) is a widely used strategy for gene expression data analysis based on pathway knowledge. GSA focuses on sets of related genes and has established major advantages over individual gene analyses, including greater robustness, sensitivity and biological relevance. However, previous GSA methods have limited usage as they cannot handle datasets of different sample sizes or experimental designs. RESULTS: To address these limitations, we present a new GSA method called Generally Applicable Gene-set Enrichment (GAGE). We successfully apply ... | |
|
Nature Biotechnology, Vol. 26, No. 10. (01 October 2008), pp. 1125-1133.
posted by
22 people
jame0taylor
guhjy
n00c
hzoltan
seb1
inesdesantiago
heliopais
stubrown
installe
Annab
jfr
Borelli
jbhiatt
Pascalichouchou
bertelsen
frohike
natstreet
druvus
reyez
alexknight
psique
GeeSharpMinor
AbstractIt could be argued that the greatest transformative aspect of the Human Genome Project has been not the sequencing of the genome itself, but the resultant development of new technologies. A host of new approaches has fundamentally changed the way we approach problems in basic and translational research. Now, a new generation of high-throughput sequencing technologies promises to again transform the scientific enterprise, potentially supplanting array-based technologies and opening up many new possibilities. By allowing DNA/RNA to be assayed more rapidly ... | |
|
Science, Vol. 298, No. 5594. (25 October 2002), pp. 824-827.
posted by
91 people
ypjones
chenmengjie87
johanneskoester
andreassorge
christianholz
kimbie
megraw
kubyaddi
antonkratz
jaspervoskuilen
complex networks
Sergey_gerbek
nurban
balabu
ocs
mjoach
makrehchi
schwartzjmc
poirel
tomhebbron
arsyed
vtraag
sergiun
fierykylin
Akimasa
operon
GEB
dlobo
daforerog
chasmand
wei_tang
darian
orahcio
babakap
brewbooks
phoenixzxl
Md_2007
mtagaya
heliopais
kaarsinogen
galyardt
cswinburne
mullonc
camster
korakot
aalibes
ChaTo
imouthesmp
Borelli
lfriedl
alexg
balicea
tny
ssb
wnpx
ddahlem
cmm
donade
neveaire
griota
gurkanbebek
jtaylor
josepe
iris_2001
michaelmampaey
rebeccamancy
karfunkel
lenov
Philosophy_of_Information
dbk-lab
Blog_and_Wiki_Research
kdl
FAB-lab
ColDyn
ADMiRes
Evangelia
roys
tfogal
zibuyu
maralena
stefanoallesina
pbull
cmor
renatomilani
shikin
GeneGo
carlk
applesnow
subhacom
i-stevenson
ethkim
Abstract10.1126/science.298.5594.824 ... | |
|
Cancer cell, Vol. 2, No. 3. (September 2002), pp. 179-182.
posted by
30 people
tomhebbron
daforerog
cambray
Borelli
arne
allysonlister
babakap
rschulz
rklancer
dbk
irenas
manduca
monod
chihchun_chen
massivemayhem
gisle
streptomyces
dbk-lab
Tominator
mattjb
ComplexAdaptiveSystems
DSTO-CAS
balicea
quianominorleo
tvdbulck
dbikard
Centre de Recherches Interdisciplinaires
SynBioSys
leilaperie
bayesian
| |
|
Genome Biology, Vol. 5, No. 10. (2004), R80.
by Robert Gentleman, Vincent Carey, Douglas Bates, et al.Ben Bolstad, Marcel Dettling, Sandrine Dudoit, Byron Ellis, Laurent Gautier, Yongchao Ge, Jeff Gentry, Kurt Hornik, Torsten Hothorn, Wolfgang Huber, Stefano Iacus, Rafael Irizarry, Friedrich Leisch, Cheng Li, Martin Maechler, Anthony Rossini, Gunther Sawitzki, Colin Smith, Gordon Smyth, Luke Tierney, Jean Yang, Jianhua Zhang
posted by
31 people
jamesmorris
ShouyongPeng
Bioinformatics
jfr
shikin
schwalb
mqbphcw3
isimpson
anf
sebastien_vigneau
najwvandijk
coela
YukaH
daforerog
czeller
gupton
Dax42
pcahan1
balajis
dullhunk
giovanni
incovoma
talponer
GeschwindLab
medha1
wirawan
joule
zhouyu
bertelsen
sanchezbuelna
bakakaj
AbstractThe Bioconductor project is an initiative for the collaborative creation of extensible software for computational biology and bioinformatics. The goals of the project include: fostering collaborative development and widespread use of innovative software, reducing barriers to entry into interdisciplinary scientific research, and promoting the achievement of remote reproducibility of research results. We describe details of our aims and methods, identify current challenges, compare Bioconductor to other open bioinformatics projects, and provide working examples. ... | |
|
Nature reviews. Genetics, Vol. 7, No. 2. (01 February 2006), pp. 119-129.
posted by
59 people
lyss
lilianvt
cdsouthan
wkretzsch
mgaldino
Bioinformatics
krapnik
tanyacovi6
MARCOUNAM
eudominguezmartin
sm-rush
LEONRANGEL
artaban421
rocling
bertelsen
virolog
dipenps
druvus
Zephyrus
fgibson
psique
lmichan
BergmanLab
cisevol
ilyashl
henk-cul
daforerog
isimpson
dansullivanblk
yggdrasil
Enro
guhjy
kuhn
yas
dullhunk
hpiwowar
dgront
caporaso
zlu
jacky957
lynnefox
jdiggans
cjeans
ghattem
michaelmampaey
dejori
jandot
T_lab
biomedical-nlp
ADMiRes
mircea
farzanehs
larsjuhljensen
adoms
skumagai
TheresaNiederberger
satre
akastrin
ibuch
AbstractFor the average biologist, hands-on literature mining currently means a keyword search in PubMed. However, methods for extracting biomedical facts from the scientific literature have improved considerably, and the associated tools will probably soon be used in many laboratories to automatically annotate and analyse the growing number of system-wide experimental data sets. Owing to the increasing body of text and the open-access policies of many journals, literature mining is also becoming useful for both hypothesis generation and biological discovery. However, the ... | |
|
Nucl. Acids Res., Vol. 37, No. 4. (1 March 2009), pp. 1011-1034.
posted by
28 people
mamoru
operon
jasontsai
vvoorr
Journal picks
qayub
michaelbarton
polivares
pawelsobko
Zephyrus
gwallau
LabDros
dayjm
nurban
natstreet
druvus
biomcgary
mlog
tomhebbron
haloin
VGreiff
lizbiogen
inquil
lp2
gjuggler
guhjy
sebastien_vigneau
sjcockell
AbstractComparative genomics and systems biology offer unprecedented opportunities for testing central tenets of evolutionary biology formulated by Darwin in the Origin of Species in 1859 and expanded in the Modern Synthesis 100 years later. Evolutionary-genomic studies show that natural selection is only one of the forces that shape genome evolution and is not quantitatively dominant, whereas non-adaptive processes are much more prominent than previously suspected. Major contributions of horizontal gene transfer and diverse selfish genetic elements to genome evolution undermine the ... | |
|
PLoS computational biology In PLoS Comput Biol, Vol. 5, No. 6. (26 June 2009), e1000372.
posted by
28 people
Yanno
rossmounce
Bioinformatics Core Service
jforment
jfr
CBD Convention on Biological Diversity
fgibson
Fournier34
pekrau
flbarroso
natstreet
Poverty Alleviation from Access to Knowledge
Convention on Knowledge Commons
jago
kongl
FabienneGranier
druvus
nuin
VGreiff
operon
aprasad
chrisamiller
jmeppley
Bioinformatics
dswan
reyez
kshameer
dullhunk
| |
|
Nature, Vol. 415, No. 6868. (10 January 2002), pp. 141-147.
by Anne-Claude C. Gavin, Markus Bösche, Roland Krause, et al.Paola Grandi, Martina Marzioch, Andreas Bauer, Jörg Schultz, Jens M. Rick, Anne-Marie M. Michon, Cristina-Maria M. Cruciat, Marita Remor, Christian Höfert, Malgorzata Schelder, Miro Brajenovic, Heinz Ruffner, Alejandro Merino, Karin Klein, Manuela Hudak, David Dickson, Tatjana Rudi, Volker Gnau, Angela Bauch, Sonja Bastuck, Bettina Huhse, Christina Leutwein, Marie-Anne A. Heurtier, Richard R. Copley, Angela Edelmann, Erich Querfurth, Vladimir Rybin, Gerard Drewes, Manfred Raida, Tewis Bouwmeester, Peer Bork, Bertrand Seraphin, Bernhard Kuster, Gitte Neubauer, Giulio Superti-Furga
posted by
28 people
dutilh
aceol
carlk
chica
lawraga
semin
cerca
taenneken
adiel
baaden
dragonrez
shivaram
helenc
lfriedl
chad_davis
balajis
opheliav
wnpx
becarmson
raiyar
grahamc
nicoleq
kdl
steinmetzlab
iris_2001
csanford
frohike
ethkim
AbstractMost cellular processes are carried out by multiprotein complexes. The identification and analysis of their components provides insight into how the ensemble of expressed proteins (proteome) is organized into functional units. We used tandem-affinity purification (TAP) and mass spectrometry in a large-scale approach to characterize multiprotein complexes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We processed 1,739 genes, including 1,143 human orthologues of relevance to human biology, and purified 589 protein assemblies. Bioinformatic analysis of these assemblies defined 232 distinct multiprotein complexes and proposed new ... | |
|
Nucl. Acids Res., Vol. 32, No. suppl_1. (1 January 2004), pp. D258-261.
posted by
15 people
mayercd
vkwn
YukaH
mlkd
katerinakal
setar
balajis
nuke2005
benny
dullhunk
bundschu
sgoetz
talponer
generif_paper
waghsk
AbstractThe Gene Ontology (GO) project (http://www. geneontology.org/) provides structured, controlled vocabularies and classifications that cover several domains of molecular and cellular biology and are freely available for community use in the annotation of genes, gene products and sequences. Many model organism databases and genome annotation groups use the GO and contribute their annotation sets to the GO resource. The GO database integrates the vocabularies and contributed annotations and provides full access to this information in several formats. Members of the GO ... | |
|
BMC bioinformatics, Vol. 10, No. 1. (2009), 74.
by Ilhami Visne, Erkan Dilaveroglu, Klemens Vierlinger, et al.Martin Lauss, Ahmet Yildiz, Andreas Weinhaeusel, Christa Noehammer, Friedrich Leisch, Albert Kriegner
posted by
27 people
ltitodem
operon
jfr
daforerog
natstreet
guhjy
lwaldron
Yanno
rdiaz
siebert
nuin
trfield
pengchy
acj2109
Mycology
stajich
jmeppley
fpattyn
VGreiff
renatomilani
BergmanLab
cisevol
erexhepa
Bioinformatics
dswan
jandot
druvus
AbstractBACKGROUND: R is the leading open source statistics software with a vast number of biostatistical and bioinformatical analysis packages. To exploit the advantages of R, extensive scripting/programming skills are required. RESULTS: We have developed a software tool called R GUI Generator (RGG) which enables the easy generation of Graphical User Interfaces (GUIs) for the programming language R by adding a few Extensible Markup Language (XML) - tags. RGG consists of an XML-based GUI definition language and a Java-based GUI engine. GUIs ... | |
|
Nucl. Acids Res., Vol. 35, No. Web Server issue. (18 June 2007), gkm291.
posted by
13 people
jeargle
tomjad
druvus
Cortel
daforerog
moborg
dullhunk
sujaikumar
sgoetz
niallhaslam
sim82
alanrw
tny
AbstractWe present a new version of the European Bioinformatics Institute Web Services, a complete suite of SOAP-based web tools for structural and functional analysis, with new and improved applications. New functionality has been added to most of the services already available, and an improved version of the underlying framework has allowed us to include more applications. Information on the EBI Web Services, tutorials and clients can be found at http://www.ebi.ac.uk/Tools/webservices. 10.1093/nar/gkm291 ... | |
|
Nucl. Acids Res. In Nucl. Acids Res., Vol. 36, No. 10. (1 June 2008), pp. 3420-3435.
by Stefan Gotz, Juan M. Garcia-Gomez, Javier Terol, et al.Tim D. Williams, Shivashankar H. Nagaraj, Maria J. Nueda, Montserrat Robles, Manuel Talon, Joaquin Dopazo, Ana Conesa
AbstractFunctional genomics technologies have been widely adopted in the biological research of both model and non-model species. An efficient functional annotation of DNA or protein sequences is a major requirement for the successful application of these approaches as functional information on gene products is often the key to the interpretation of experimental results. Therefore, there is an increasing need for bioinformatics resources which are able to cope with large amount of sequence data, produce valuable annotation results and are easily accessible ... | |
|
Nature, Vol. 455, No. 7209. (03 September 2008), pp. 47-50.
by Doug Howe, Maria Costanzo, Petra Fey, et al.Takashi Gojobori, Linda Hannick, Winston Hide, David P. Hill, Renate Kania, Mary Schaeffer, Susan St Pierre, Simon Twigger, Owen White, Seung Yon Rhee
posted by
28 people
lorraineeakin
mfenner
welliegirl
mtaschuk
applebyb
shankark
abhishek_tiwari
kshameer
barriot
eesruiz
daforerog
allysonlister
guhjy
jfr
lindenb
natstreet
christoph_steinbeck
thomaskelder
druvus
vobios
hpiwowar
amarois
Roswell Cancer Crosstalk
Zephyrus
psique
fgibson
dullhunk
neils
AbstractTo thrive, the field that links biologists and their data urgently needs structure, recognition and support. The exponential growth in the amount of biological data means that revolutionary measures are needed for data management, analysis and accessibility. Online databases have become important avenues for publishing biological data. ... | |
|
Bioinformatics (Oxford, England), Vol. 21, No. 12. (15 June 2005), pp. 2814-2820.
by Rachel Karchin, Mark Diekhans, Libusha Kelly, et al.Daryl J. Thomas, Ursula Pieper, Narayanan Eswar, David Haussler, Andrej Sali
posted by
9 people
ubcg08l
daforerog
mattjb
massivemayhem
cat_worth
lpfernandes
structural_bioinformatics
ComplexAdaptiveSystems
DSTO-CAS
AbstractMOTIVATION: The NCBI dbSNP database lists over 9 million single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the human genome, but currently contains limited annotation information. SNPs that result in amino acid residue changes (nsSNPs) are of critical importance in variation between individuals, including disease and drug sensitivity. RESULTS: We have developed LS-SNP, a genomic scale software pipeline to annotate nsSNPs. LS-SNP comprehensively maps nsSNPs onto protein sequences, functional pathways and comparative protein structure models, and predicts positions where nsSNPs destabilize proteins, interfere with ... | |
|
Science (New York, N.Y.), Vol. 270, No. 5235. (20 October 1995), pp. 467-470.
posted by
16 people
jfr
daforerog
mqbphcw3
winterschlaefer
jangamannie
sgoetz
dragonrez
Dax42
stsaft
fisherp
jeremymiller
tvdbulck
talponer
GeschwindLab
frohike
shikin
AbstractA high-capacity system was developed to monitor the expression of many genes in parallel. Microarrays prepared by high-speed robotic printing of complementary DNAs on glass were used for quantitative expression measurements of the corresponding genes. Because of the small format and high density of the arrays, hybridization volumes of 2 microliters could be used that enabled detection of rare transcripts in probe mixtures derived from 2 micrograms of total cellular messenger RNA. Differential expression measurements of 45 Arabidopsis genes were made ... | |
|
Nature, Vol. 440, No. 7084. (22 March 2006), pp. 637-643.
by Nevan J. Krogan, Gerard Cagney, Haiyuan Yu, et al.Gouqing Zhong, Xinghua Guo, Alexandr Ignatchenko, Joyce Li, Shuye Pu, Nira Datta, Aaron P. Tikuisis, Thanuja Punna, José M. PeregrÃn-Alvarez, Michael Shales, Xin Zhang, Michael Davey, Mark D. Robinson, Alberto Paccanaro, James E. Bray, Anthony Sheung, Bryan Beattie, Dawn P. Richards, Veronica Canadien, Atanas Lalev, Frank Mena, Peter Wong, Andrei Starostine, Myra M. Canete, James Vlasblom, Samuel Wu, Chris Orsi, Sean R. Collins, Shamanta Chandran, Robin Haw, Jennifer J. Rilstone, Kiran Gandi, Natalie J. Thompson, Gabe Musso, Peter St Onge, Shaun Ghanny, Mandy H. Y. Lam, Gareth Butland, Amin M. Altaf-Ul, Shigehiko Kanaya, Ali Shilatifard, Erin O'Shea, Jonathan S. Weissman, C. James Ingles, Timothy R. Hughes, John Parkinson, Mark Gerstein, Shoshana J. Wodak, Andrew Emili, Jack F. Greenblatt
posted by
36 people
aceol
mpotamias
Paccanaro Lab
paccanarolab
ajbattle
mgomes
jxl
bicko
cerca
jiny
Borelli
lfriedl
chad_davis
balajis
marcius
tardigrade
nirfriedman
balabu
j3xucite
nickluscombe
koller
raiyar
cjeans
nicoleq
kdl
EBI-regulation
BioinfoCIPF
SGU-CIPF
Evangelia
csaveanu
frohike
carlk
hplatero
chasmand
mapplab
ethkim
AbstractIdentification of protein–protein interactions often provides insight into protein function, and many cellular processes are performed by stable protein complexes. We used tandem affinity purification to process 4,562 different tagged proteins of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Each preparation was analysed by both matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization–time of flight mass spectrometry and liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry to increase coverage and accuracy. Machine learning was used to integrate the mass spectrometry scores and assign probabilities to the protein–protein interactions. Among 4,087 different proteins ... | |
|
Nucleic acids research, Vol. 32, No. Database issue. (1 January 2004), pp. D277-280.
posted by
14 people
Akilah712
ipark-kaist
tfuji
mqbphcw3
irenas
BragilMassoud
lfriedl
nuke2005
alexg
bioinfo
wnpx
Garamonfok
kdl
shung
AbstractA grand challenge in the post-genomic era is a complete computer representation of the cell and the organism, which will enable computational prediction of higher-level complexity of cellular processes and organism behavior from genomic information. Toward this end we have been developing a knowledge-based approach for network prediction, which is to predict, given a complete set of genes in the genome, the protein interaction networks that are responsible for various cellular processes. KEGG at http://www.genome.ad.jp/kegg/ is the reference knowledge base that ... | |
|
Nature Biotechnology, Vol. 27, No. 5. (01 May 2009), pp. 455-457.
posted by
43 people
robsyme
sandfire
viren4388
meanerelk
justinhjohnson
michaelbarton
frohike
agbiotec
burak
cthachuk
hzoltan
tonamswish
heliopais
giovenko
Bioinformatics
jfr
torfinnnome
daforerog
jonilaserson
Chinnaiyan Lab
mkiyer
Annab
darian
BergmanLab
polivares
SIMR bioinformatics
ghattem
kiekyon
n00c
GeeSharpMinor
guhjy
nuin
reyez
orzenil
Thaverkamp
natstreet
druvus
fenghezi
Bioinformatics - CRUK
Stew
inesdesantiago
idonaldson
neils
AbstractA new generation of DNA sequencers that can rapidly and inexpensively sequence billions of bases is transforming genomic science. These new machines are quickly becoming the technology of choice for whole-genome sequencing and for a variety of sequencing-based assays, including gene expression, DNA-protein interaction, human resequencing and RNA splicing studies. ... | |
|
New biotechnology, Vol. 25, No. 4. (03 April 2009), pp. 195-203.
posted by
12 people
leelarcombe
GustavoLacerda
darian
manduca
inesdesantiago
heliopais
natstreet
druvus
guhjy
n00c
svenrahmann
ImranRaoufMalik
AbstractNext-generation high-throughput DNA sequencing techniques are opening fascinating opportunities in the life sciences. Novel fields and applications in biology and medicine are becoming a reality, beyond the genomic sequencing which was original development goal and application. Serving as examples are: personal genomics with detailed analysis of individual genome stretches; precise analysis of RNA transcripts for gene expression, surpassing and replacing in several respects analysis by various microarray platforms, for instance in reliable and precise quantification of transcripts and as a tool ... | |
|
Molecular Cell, Vol. 35, No. 6. (24 September 2009), pp. 726-728.
by Uri Alon
posted by
347 people
mc1975
kivancuyanik
collier12
brunofed
megraw
_mkeller
istoyanov
cynmcc
Torsten_Holmer
rakitin
sachingarg
kirchengast
darian
robfsouza
MV_KUL
tellis
datom
erisen
eduardosl
cm1acb
6065002
gyparikh
glynj
hollace
wiizane
krisl
RobertSOakes
sgsfak
ceeskan
birukou
wmdeneve
Mnourian
ama600
spores
diogomartins
leomoraes
ypjones
srimandayam
edutars
cardiffuni
ilyashl
geoforester
rabio
waltonjones
jtcribbs
rebeccamancy
rrbarb
konilovsky
ckcheng
yangjustinc
vprieto
xavig
noamross
Integrative_biology_behavior
aubinhon
VisionLab
UAB Human Behavioral Neuroscience
kristina
goborobo
herraiz
sby
andreassorge
lilianvt
christianholz
rettema
bayesian
djproctor
mcc19732001
tariqabdulla
nbhammond
fredclem
Thaverkamp
zhouyu
karimartins
mlee1
Adrira
GuillaumeFilteau
gotrunc
lq408
marub
ommachi
dianella
billhao
rodney
NIlz
isabelpinho
kamilkonowalik
azwinkau
junehlee
shangyung
haiku
lzavala
coleslaw
binghe
lds2152
dutilh
arinbasu
moernerlab
samjlord
pjmaybank
phoenixzxl
yza0008228
plenum
mcartwri
pgardois
jodeleeuw
Philonski
jalonsoarevalo
skywalkerus02
viren4388
timread
tuijajetsu
WeiquanXu
snezana
mittinatten
alun
maxweizhao
akuhn
mculbert
jsvoboda
paulymer
ExtremeTomato
installe
iturtle
fgysin
Rohdium
kwoodsend
kou_jinsei
bmsousa
viktor21614
michaelbanks
yuifu
luzmagomezb
CulCog
jschmidt
gareth
lmichan
ZXMYST
yetun
guillermina
McCammon
barry
dejang
zahreddin
zouchen621
kruyvanna
jmchen1011
dmeister
mfenner
loopback007
codonusage
kozima
wilvancleve
snichols15
aprasad
nanonan
herrk
hyunjin4jc
alexandreconde
nellygidas
adailtulima
grahampoulter
kizzie
Quotato
icq242500260
guhjy
sama535
kangism
ajstuapt
Dijoe
horus
psique
flydream0428
acockfield
tarokiritani
rdinnage
phildeley
Kaihami
jirak
banus
owenlancaster
kaesmann
fierykylin
isp
Schopfel
ansobol
Dori2008
eisdur
Borelli
icecrown
Shared Literature Resource of the Microbial Fitness Group - MPI Bremen
kinestetika
alebalbin
davide_caldo
zhouwenbiao
thiagomanel
GustavoLacerda
greenmachine
8_01
H-Arrietaumn
richardmcgee
gjuggler
lp2
atlantis2360
gena
afcallender
Journal picks
cpeters
tux2000
jdoconnell
smichan
meriemelkaroui
leliavski
eudominguezmartin
janderz8
sdaehne
artaban421
cefa
gvdh
penneyft
welliegirl
bertelsen
thegoose
Brain-like research group
xawen
chriswillmott
nellapower
ishiken
andreff
claudiushauptmann
cermak
bmoores
karthikraman
applebyb
mordiano
Gorzomagnificent
Horduna
ajaymalik
mmwoodman
dbikard
toszko
mthomure
timflutre
cyounkin
marsl0am
jmzhuo
dmorti
renatomilani
ibre
kevinemamy
Sergey_gerbek
huberse
ddbb12
seneca
mattbiehl
mmborges
GeeSharpMinor
jjjpppfff
zhangfh
andreacapocci
melo_mcr
aaltenburger
iannis
jichok
josephjose
TorstenWaldminghaus
kshameer
rudalert
kvalyi
UWA Science Communication
duel_jetty
allaves
milab@yzu
rabit
fercosber
hax123
iskanbasal
livingthingdan
poojamaj
gonzalez
amynmoore
ramalldf
pvdg
sfalsharif
dill2009
singhsh
rogermug
aha
jarekadam
Jansen04
cgravlee
lkakinami
anuragsethi
flips
robfree
kaliczp
yyfwuhan
luciensamary
elsantosneto
mgaldino
daveGerrard
sandfire
tnhh
lesandrop
munzmarci
pdpcosta
Information Integration Architecture
mxro
wangngu
myriasofo
OliverHarriman
AnthonySoprano
robertlischke
R_C_Cordeiro
daforerog
operon
nandipati
wenhaosparty
jeffcrow
leocmcheung
fgibson
snakehsu
cisevol
BergmanLab
michaelbarton
dna
dullhunk
danilov
m_lew
abellogin
cxshang
grahamc
SantoshKalwar
Xusheng
leonardo
roys
benoitvalley
zchen75
darshan
druvus
Asclepius
Roswell Cancer Crosstalk
Zephyrus
songpku
aalibes
flieder
pedromts
AbstractChoosing good problems is essential for being a good scientist. But what is a good problem, and how do you choose one? The subject is not usually discussed explicitly within our profession. Scientists are expected to be smart enough to figure it out on their own and through the observation of their teachers. This lack of explicit discussion leaves a vacuum that can lead to approaches such as choosing problems that can give results that merit publication in valued journals, ... | |
|
Nature Reviews Genetics, Vol. 10, No. 1. (01 January 2009), pp. 57-63.
posted by
57 people
oinizan
lwaldron
balajis
pekrau
xueliangwei
bertelsen
jgarbe
skembel
viren4388
megraw
justinhjohnson
rschulz
bsamal
zufar
CUBES
hongkeun_park
ngehlenborg
hzoltan
sandfire
maren
jwfoley
urgi
RNA-protein
cthachuk
heliopais
GustavoLacerda
rdiaz
TRHvidsten
dswan
roys
woodson8
jonilaserson
gdb
n00c
ThomasDOtto
burak
natstreet
athma
druvus
tonamswish
fishtank
daed
JohnBallam
jmcq
dandaman
cassj
xingxu
idonaldson
raiyar
inesdesantiago
vplagnol
jbhiatt
giovanni
orzenil
nuin
guhjy
GeeSharpMinor
AbstractRNA-Seq is a recently developed approach to transcriptome profiling that uses deep-sequencing technologies. Studies using this method have already altered our view of the extent and complexity of eukaryotic transcriptomes. RNA-Seq also provides a far more precise measurement of levels of transcripts and their isoforms than other methods. This article describes the RNA-Seq approach, the challenges associated with its application, and the advances made so far in characterizing several eukaryote transcriptomes. ... | |
|
Nature Reviews Genetics, Vol. 7, No. 2. (01 February 2006), pp. 85-97.
posted by
38 people
alefox
ajbattle
bertelsen
baizhang
APRegier
Neeperando
xingxu
daforerog
psique
Zephyrus
GEB
dlobo
jandot
cgreal
balajis
bala
balicea
dchughes
tabu
darcyduke
adepace
AaronDarling
rdiaz
massivemayhem
cat_worth
jmrivort
ccr
Lip
CGREL
structural_bioinformatics
Bioinformatics
EisenLab
SFX-Verde-team-MITLibraries
G4ID
G-quadruplex
Supramolecular
DictyosteliumGroup
Genetics-of-Gambling
AbstractThe first wave of information from the analysis of the human genome revealed SNPs to be the main source of genetic and phenotypic human variation. However, the advent of genome-scanning technologies has now uncovered an unexpectedly large extent of what we term 'structural variation' in the human genome. This comprises microscopic and, more commonly, submicroscopic variants, which include deletions, duplications and large-scale copy-number variants — collectively termed copy-number variants or copy-number polymorphisms — as well as insertions, inversions and translocations. Rapidly ... | |
|
Microbiology and molecular biology reviews : MMBR, Vol. 72, No. 4. (1 December 2008), pp. 557-578.
posted by
55 people
gaosong0329
Ilzins
dutilh
lancepalmer
elipapa
dansullivanblk
ajsferreira
Orengo Group Journal Picks
CorinYeats
sconlan
jasontsai
Shared Literature Resource of the Microbial Fitness Group - MPI Bremen
halinat
hwright
michaelbarton
taylor73
esyoun
bluto
idoerg
hpaces
iSEEM
skembel
inquil
EKotlarska
anphony
stajich
sharpton
vrich
Papers recommended by the Roscoff Plankton Group
Microbial-Ecology
vaulot
adgrativol
Translational Bioinformatics
jakechen
balicea
dbk
GustavoLacerda
guhjy
hessec
fhalbrit
Roswell Cancer Crosstalk
Zephyrus
anazhu
dswan
sjcockell
Borelli
druvus
azazello
kinestetika
jmeppley
neils
microbiology_nijmegen
Katje
allysonlister
skato_toyaku
AbstractAs random shotgun metagenomic projects proliferate and become the dominant source of publicly available sequence data, procedures for the best practices in their execution and analysis become increasingly important. Based on our experience at the Joint Genome Institute, we describe the chain of decisions accompanying a metagenomic project from the viewpoint of the bioinformatic analysis step by step. We guide the reader through a standard workflow for a metagenomic project beginning with presequencing considerations such as community composition and sequence data ... | |
|
BMC bioinformatics, Vol. 10, No. 1. (2009), 79.
posted by
12 people
agomez
JeremyZucker
daforerog
allysonlister
guhjy
lptolik
renatomilani
fgibson
sjcockell
erexhepa
VGreiff
druvus
AbstractBACKGROUND: Within research each experiment is different, the focus changes and the data is generated from a continually evolving barrage of technologies. There is a continual introduction of new techniques whose usage ranges from in-house protocols through to high-throughput instrumentation. To support these requirements data management systems are needed that can be rapidly built and readily adapted for new usage. RESULTS: The adaptable data management system discussed is designed to support the seamless mining and analysis of biological experiment data that ... | |
|
Nature, Vol. 442, No. 7104. (19 July 2006), pp. 772-778.
by Eran Segal, Yvonne Fondufe-Mittendorf, Lingyi Chen, et al.AnnChristine Thastrom, Yair Field, Irene K. Moore, Ji-Ping Z. Wang, Jonathan Widom
posted by
32 people
afenley
roys
TRHvidsten
hagechouchin443
natstreet
dakelley
kentsis
aalibes
alokm
marcius
indigoviolet
dchughes
cconboy
neveaire
kengg
johncumbers
joshuashen
joepickrell
GustavoLacerda
Biostatistics
Computational-Genomics
Bioinformatics
EisenLab
Neuroscience
G4ID
BioinfoCIPF
SGU-CIPF
Plantandetc
Genetics-of-Gambling
rschulz
inesdesantiago
sonjadaniela
AbstractEukaryotic genomes are packaged into nucleosome particles that occlude the DNA from interacting with most DNA binding proteins. Nucleosomes have higher affinity for particular DNA sequences, reflecting the ability of the sequence to bend sharply, as required by the nucleosome structure. However, it is not known whether these sequence preferences have a significant influence on nucleosome position in vivo, and thus regulate the access of other proteins to DNA. Here we isolated nucleosome-bound sequences at high resolution from yeast and used ... | |
|
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Vol. 100, No. 14. (8 July 2003), pp. 8348-8353.
posted by
25 people
cjm
phoenixzxl
ruichu
bertelsen
bresiva
BioGeek
serak
dragonrez
okarsligil
lfriedl
balajis
eckart_bindewald
eweaver
luispedro
opheliav
wnpx
nedwards
kdl
Bioinformatics
Evangelia
kallberg
isimpson
carlk
srp33
frohike
Abstract10.1073/pnas.0832373100 Genomic sequencing is no longer a novelty, but gene function annotation remains a key challenge in modern biology. A variety of functional genomics experimental techniques are available, from classic methods such as affinity precipitation to advanced high-throughput techniques such as gene expression microarrays. In the future, more disparate methods will be developed, further increasing the need for integrated computational analysis of data generated by these studies. We address this problem with (Multisource Association of Genes by Integration of Clusters), ... | |
|
Brief Bioinform, Vol. 10, No. 1. (1 January 2009), pp. 1-10.
posted by
24 people
pekrau
justinhjohnson
rossmounce
Dentistry
suribe
fgibson
agbiotec
agomez
cassj
VGreiff
nuin
reyez
jmeppley
Gaetan
allysonlister
guhjy
logics of knowledge
A_Olympia
allancho
nlapalu
renatomilani
paszkows
druvus
dullhunk
AbstractEnabling deft data integration from numerous, voluminous and heterogeneous data sources is a major bioinformatic challenge. Several approaches have been proposed to address this challenge, including data warehousing and federated databasing. Yet despite the rise of these approaches, integration of data from multiple sources remains problematic and toilsome. These two approaches follow a user-to-computer communication model for data exchange, and do not facilitate a broader concept of data sharing or collaboration among users. In this report, we discuss the potential of ... | |
|
Journal of biology, Vol. 6, No. 2. (30 April 2007), 4.
by Juan I. Castrillo, Leo A. Zeef, David C. Hoyle, et al.Nianshu Zhang, Andrew Hayes, David C. Gardner, Michael J. Cornell, June Petty, Luke Hakes, Leanne Wardleworth, Bharat Rash, Marie Brown, Warwick B. Dunn, David Broadhurst, Kerry O'Donoghue, Svenja S. Hester, Tom P. Dunkley, Sarah R. Hart, Neil Swainston, Peter Li, Simon J. Gaskell, Norman W. Paton, Kathryn S. Lilley, Douglas B. Kell, Stephen G. Oliver
posted by
16 people
Hartlibian Research
cgaugain
mqbphcw3
schwartzjmc
neilswainston
michaelbarton
aalibes
alexg
dullhunk
balabu
dylan77
cabbagezs
Stew
EisenLab
roys
alanrw
AbstractBACKGROUND: Cell growth underlies many key cellular and developmental processes, yet a limited number of studies have been carried out on cell-growth regulation. Comprehensive studies at the transcriptional, proteomic and metabolic levels under defined controlled conditions are currently lacking. RESULTS: Metabolic control analysis is being exploited in a systems biology study of the eukaryotic cell. Using chemostat culture, we have measured the impact of changes in flux (growth rate) on the transcriptome, proteome, endometabolome and exometabolome of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. ... | |
|
Genome Research, Vol. 17, No. 6. (June 2007), pp. 669-681.
by Mark B. Gerstein, Can Bruce, Joel S. Rozowsky, et al.Deyou Zheng, Jiang Du, Jan O. Korbel, Olof Emanuelsson, Zhengdong D. Zhang, Sherman Weissman, Michael Snyder
posted by
43 people
viren4388
idoerg
Zephyrus
daforerog
daveGerrard
Yanno
inesdesantiago
kentz
ddcttrl
bertelsen
tmarscha
thegoose2
burak
guhjy
carolh12
eweaver
dpollard
balicea
dchughes
dullhunk
madhadron
cottrell
grahamc
egonw
ghattem
sujaikumar
Garamonfok
PunkRock
jasonbobe
PredictER
cabbagezs
Jporci
kmdaily
krokicki
antonkratz
Bioinformatics
EisenLab
G4ID
Genetics-of-Gambling
hpaces
tharris
altotor
mjoach
Abstract10.1101/gr.6339607 While sequencing of the human genome surprised us with how many protein-coding genes there are, it did not fundamentally change our perspective on what a gene is. In contrast, the complex patterns of dispersed regulation and pervasive transcription uncovered by the ENCODE project, together with non-genic conservation and the abundance of noncoding RNA genes, have challenged the notion of the gene. To illustrate this, we review the evolution of operational definitions of a gene over the past centuryâfrom the abstract ... | |
|
Genome Biology, Vol. 10, No. 1. (30 January 2009), 201.
by Jennifer Harrow, Alinda Nagy, Alexandre Reymond, et al.Tyler Alioto, Laszlo Patthy, Stylianos Antonarakis, Roderic Guigo
posted by
18 people
GustavoLacerda
Bioinformatics
jfr
antonkratz
robfsouza
nlapalu
renatomilani
Khavkin's lab
ArtemPankin
hpaces
guhjy
michaelbarton
idoerg
jm12
pawelszczesny
natstreet
barriot
druvus
AbstractThe vast majority of the biology of a newly sequenced genome is inferred from the set of encoded proteins. Predicting this set is therefore invariably the first step after the completion of the genome DNA sequence. Here we review the main computational pipelines used to generate the human reference protein-coding gene sets. ... | |
|
Drug discovery today, Vol. 11, No. 23-24. (December 2006), pp. 1085-1092.
posted by
17 people
dadiamah
peterli
flbarroso
schwartzjmc
egonw
irenas
nicklynch
alexg
dullhunk
mhucka
raiyar
fishtank
steinmetzlab
shikin
GeneGo
alanrw
gemmalholliday
AbstractUnlike signalling pathways, metabolic networks are subject to strict stoichiometric constraints. Metabolomics amplifies changes in the proteome, and represents more closely the phenotype of an organism. Recent advances enable the production (and computer-readable encoding as SBML) of metabolic network models reconstructed from genome sequences, as well as experimental measurements of much of the metabolome. There is increasing convergence between the number of human metabolites estimated via genomics ( approximately 3000) and the number measured experimentally. It is thus both timely, and ... | |
|
Bioinformatics, Vol. 21, No. 18. (15 September 2005), pp. 3674-3676.
posted by
13 people
sotacam
operon
seb1
Thaverkamp
karinlag
nlapalu
bertelsen
fbristow
Garamonfok
sgoetz
talponer
imelda
aconesa
AbstractSummary: We present here Blast2GO (B2G), a research tool designed with the main purpose of enabling Gene Ontology (GO) based data mining on sequence data for which no GO annotation is yet available. B2G joints in one application GO annotation based on similarity searches with statistical analysis and highlighted visualization on directed acyclic graphs. This tool offers a suitable platform for functional genomics research in non-model species. B2G is an intuitive and interactive desktop application that allows monitoring and comprehension of ... | |
|
Genome research, Vol. 19, No. 6. (1 June 2009), pp. 1117-1123.
posted by
35 people
leelarcombe
fernan
agbiotec
justinhjohnson
jts
darian
jfr
cthachuk
hzoltan
ramonvidal
orzenil
pachorip
GustavoLacerda
jonilaserson
operon
BergmanLab
polivares
reyez
jasontsai
n00c
humburg
dakelley
jessopher
idonaldson
robsyme
neils
natstreet
AaronDarling
druvus
rpatward
dswan
Mycology
stajich
jbhiatt
erikarner
AbstractWidespread adoption of massively parallel deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) sequencing instruments has prompted the recent development of de novo short read assembly algorithms. A common shortcoming of the available tools is their inability to efficiently assemble vast amounts of data generated from large-scale sequencing projects, such as the sequencing of individual human genomes to catalog natural genetic variation. To address this limitation, we developed ABySS (Assembly By Short Sequences), a parallelized sequence assembler. As a demonstration of the capability of our software, ... | |
|
Genome Biology, Vol. 8, No. 3. (16 March 2007), R39.
by Imre Vastrik, Peter D'Eustachio, Esther Schmidt, et al.Geeta J. Tope, Gopal Gopinath, David Croft, Bernard de Bono, Marc Gillespie, Bijay Jassal, Suzanna Lewis, Lisa Matthews, Guanming Wu, Ewan Birney, Lincoln Stein
posted by
17 people
sgsfak
ipark-kaist
neilswainston
peterli
bertelsen
aramesh2
dolchan
shikin
fgibson
reyez
guhjy
dragonrez
jfr
balajis
raiyar
toshiaki_katayama
AlexanderPico
AbstractReactome http://www.reactome.org, an online curated resource for human pathway data, provides infrastructure for computation across the biologic reaction network. We use Reactome to infer equivalent reactions in multiple nonhuman species, and present data on the reliability of these inferred reactions for the distantly related eukaryote Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Finally, we describe the use of Reactome both as a learning resource and as a computational tool to aid in the interpretation of microarrays and similar large-scale datasets. ... | |
|
BMC bioinformatics, Vol. 8 Suppl 3, No. Suppl 3. (2007), S2.
by Alan Ruttenberg, Tim Clark, William Bug, et al.Matthias Samwald, Olivier Bodenreider, Helen Chen, Donald Doherty, Kerstin Forsberg, Yong Gao, Vipul Kashyap, June Kinoshita, Joanne Luciano, M. Scott Marshall, Chimezie Ogbuji, Jonathan Rees, Susie Stephens, Gwendolyn T. Wong, Elizabeth Wu, Davide Zaccagnini, Tonya Hongsermeier, Eric Neumann, Ivan Herman, Kei-Hoi H. Cheung
posted by
36 people
mikel_egana
mgns
jfr
MDR
allysonlister
beanformer
artaban421
nicklynch
vkwn
FAB-lab
rvosa
ImagCom - Biomedical Text Computing
eesruiz
NaCTeM
Effie
simonmcbride
druvus
gmcmahon
fgibson
nuin
daforerog
guhjy
Cortel
wnpx
dullhunk
hpiwowar
egonw
suizan
jasonbobe
ibuch
PredictER
bmaust
benfqt
Gaetan
Evidence-based-medicine
dansullivanblk
AbstractBACKGROUND: A fundamental goal of the U.S. National Institute of Health (NIH) "Roadmap" is to strengthen Translational Research, defined as the movement of discoveries in basic research to application at the clinical level. A significant barrier to translational research is the lack of uniformly structured data across related biomedical domains. The Semantic Web is an extension of the current Web that enables navigation and meaningful use of digital resources by automatic processes. It is based on common formats that support aggregation ... | |
|
Genome research, Vol. 17, No. 3. (06 March 2007), pp. 377-386.
posted by
23 people
skennedy8
rneches
karinlag
Orengo Group Journal Picks
CorinYeats
ajsferreira
taylor73
esyoun
dakelley
Thaverkamp
druvus
idoerg
guhjy
treangen
jmeppley
azazello
wenhan
carpi
alexl
mjetten
anammox
microbiology_nijmegen
hpaces
AbstractMetagenomics is the study of the genomic content of a sample of organisms obtained from a common habitat using targeted or random sequencing. Goals include understanding the extent and role of microbial diversity. The taxonomical content of such a sample is usually estimated by comparison against sequence databases of known sequences. Most published studies use the analysis of paired-end reads, complete sequences of environmental fosmid and BAC clones, or environmental assemblies. Emerging sequencing-by-synthesis technologies with very high throughput are paving the ... | |
|
PLoS Computational Biology, Vol. 4, No. 12. (26 December 2008), e1000247.
posted by
42 people
Schopfel
spores
mfenner
birukou
tnhh
Scis0000002
deanmalmgren
pablog
jrw
dbmi-nlp
henk-cul
STS
Academic Writing, Literacies and Discourse
kaniko
rschulz
lesikv
phreeza
najwvandijk
aberamanda
pick600
siebert
kevinemamy
reyez
VGreiff
guano
jcaddy
mmarois
Yanno
GustavoLacerda
allysonlister
dswan
nuin
sebastien_vigneau
Roswell Cancer Crosstalk
Zephyrus
thomaskelder
rs
dbk
dullhunk
kshameer
Mycology
stajich
|






