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BMC Bioinformatics, Vol. 8 (14 June 2007), 204.
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Brief Bioinform, Vol. 4, No. 3. (September 2003), pp. 292-296.
Abstract
Life scientists who work with the supermarket of genome data will find the EnsMart database and software package offers a valuable door to a wealth of genes and genome features. Not only available to lab biologists on the web, this popular multi-organism genome database can be installed and used on your own Unix computer with relative ease. It offers a flexible, fast and practical data-mining framework for computer-savvy biologists and bioinformaticians. ...
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Genome Res., Vol. 14, No. 1. (1 January 2004), pp. 160-169.
Abstract
The EnsMart system (www.ensembl.org/EnsMart) provides a generic data warehousing solution for fast and flexible querying of large biological data sets and integration with third-party data and tools. The system consists of a query-optimized database and interactive, user-friendly interfaces. EnsMart has been applied to Ensembl, where it extends its genomic browser capabilities, facilitating rapid retrieval of customized data sets. A wide variety of complex queries, on various types of annotations, for numerous species are supported. These can be applied to many research ...
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Nucleic acids research, Vol. 35, No. Database issue. (January 2007)
by T. J. Hubbard, B. L. Aken, K. Beal, et al.B. Ballester, M. Caccamo, Y. Chen, L. Clarke, G. Coates, F. Cunningham, T. Cutts, T. Down, S. C. Dyer, S. Fitzgerald, J. Fernandez-Banet, S. Graf, S. Haider, M. Hammond, J. Herrero, R. Holland, K. Howe, K. Howe, N. Johnson, A. Kahari, D. Keefe, F. Kokocinski, E. Kulesha, D. Lawson, I. Longden, C. Melsopp, K. Megy, P. Meidl, B. Ouverdin, A. Parker, A. Prlic, S. Rice, D. Rios, M. Schuster, I. Sealy, J. Severin, G. Slater, D. Smedley, G. Spudich, S. Trevanion, A. Vilella, J. Vogel, S. White, M. Wood, T. Cox, V. Curwen, R. Durbin, X. M. Fernandez-Suarez, P. Flicek, A. Kasprzyk, G. Proctor, S. Searle, J. Smith, A. Ureta-Vidal, E. Birney
Abstract
The Ensembl (http://www.ensembl.org/) project provides a comprehensive and integrated source of annotation of chordate genome sequences. Over the past year the number of genomes available from Ensembl has increased from 15 to 33, with the addition of sites for the mammalian genomes of elephant, rabbit, armadillo, tenrec, platypus, pig, cat, bush baby, common shrew, microbat and european hedgehog; the fish genomes of stickleback and medaka and the second example of the genomes of the sea squirt (Ciona savignyi) and the mosquito ...
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Appl Bioinformatics, Vol. 5, No. 1. (2006), pp. 29-39.
Abstract
The Internet consists of a vast inhomogeneous reservoir of data. Developing software that can integrate a wide variety of different data sources is a major challenge that must be addressed for the realisation of the full potential of the Internet as a scientific research tool. This article presents a semi-automated object-oriented programming system for integrating web-based resources. We demonstrate that the current Internet standards (HTML, CGI [common gateway interface], Java, etc.) can be exploited to develop a data retrieval system that ...
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BMC bioinformatics, Vol. 6 (2005)
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Collecting and managing information is a challenging task in a genome-wide profiling research project. Most databases and online computational tools require a direct human involvement. Information and computational results are presented in various multimedia formats (e.g., text, image, PDF, word files, etc.), many of which cannot be automatically processed by computers in biologically meaningful ways. In addition, the quality of computational results is far from perfect and requires nontrivial manual examination. The timely selection, integration and interpretation of heterogeneous biological ...
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Bioinformatics, Vol. 21, No. 16. (15 August 2005), pp. 3439-3440.
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PLoS computational biology, Vol. 3, No. 11. (1 November 2007), e237.
Abstract
"Phylogenetic profiling" is based on the hypothesis that during evolution functionally or physically interacting genes are likely to be inherited or eliminated in a codependent manner. Creating presence-absence profiles of orthologous genes is now a common and powerful way of identifying functionally associated genes. In this approach, correctly determining orthology, as a means of identifying functional equivalence between two genes, is a critical and nontrivial step and largely explains why previous work in this area has mainly focused on using presence-absence ...
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Science, Vol. 316, No. 5831. (15 June 2007), pp. 1556-1557.
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Nature Reviews Genetics, Vol. 8, No. 6. (08 May 2007), pp. 413-423.
Abstract
Recent evidence of genome-wide transcription in several species indicates that the amount of transcription that occurs cannot be entirely accounted for by current sets of genome-wide annotations. Evidence indicates that most of both strands of the human genome might be transcribed, implying extensive overlap of transcriptional units and regulatory elements. These observations suggest that genomic architecture is not colinear, but is instead interleaved and modular, and that the same genomic sequences are multifunctional: that is, used for multiple independently regulated transcripts ...
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Science, Vol. 316, No. 5830. (8 June 2007), pp. 1484-1488.
by Philipp Kapranov, Jill Cheng, Sujit Dike, et al.David A. Nix, Radharani Duttagupta, Aarron T. Willingham, Peter F. Stadler, Jana Hertel, Jorg Hackermuller, Ivo L. Hofacker, Ian Bell, Evelyn Cheung, Jorg Drenkow, Erica Dumais, Sandeep Patel, Gregg Helt, Madhavan Ganesh, Srinka Ghosh, Antonio Piccolboni, Victor Sementchenko, Hari Tammana, Thomas R. Gingeras
Abstract
Significant fractions of eukaryotic genomes give rise to RNA, much of which is unannotated and has reduced protein-coding potential. The genomic origins and the associations of human nuclear and cytosolic polyadenylated RNAs longer than 200 nucleotides (nt) and whole-cell RNAs less than 200 nt were investigated in this genome-wide study. Subcellular addresses for nucleotides present in detected RNAs were assigned, and their potential processing into short RNAs was investigated. Taken together, these observations suggest a novel role for some unannotated RNAs ...
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