scholarly journals Correlation AnalyzeR: functional predictions from gene co-expression correlations

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Henry E. Miller ◽  
Alexander J. R. Bishop

Abstract Background Co-expression correlations provide the ability to predict gene functionality within specific biological contexts, such as different tissue and disease conditions. However, current gene co-expression databases generally do not consider biological context. In addition, these tools often implement a limited range of unsophisticated analysis approaches, diminishing their utility for exploring gene functionality and gene relationships. Furthermore, they typically do not provide the summary visualizations necessary to communicate these results, posing a significant barrier to their utilization by biologists without computational skills. Results We present Correlation AnalyzeR, a user-friendly web interface for exploring co-expression correlations and predicting gene functions, gene–gene relationships, and gene set topology. Correlation AnalyzeR provides flexible access to its database of tissue and disease-specific (cancer vs normal) genome-wide co-expression correlations, and it also implements a suite of sophisticated computational tools for generating functional predictions with user-friendly visualizations. In the usage example provided here, we explore the role of BRCA1-NRF2 interplay in the context of bone cancer, demonstrating how Correlation AnalyzeR can be effectively implemented to generate and support novel hypotheses. Conclusions Correlation AnalyzeR facilitates the exploration of poorly characterized genes and gene relationships to reveal novel biological insights. The database and all analysis methods can be accessed as a web application at https://gccri.bishop-lab.uthscsa.edu/correlation-analyzer/ and as a standalone R package at https://github.com/Bishop-Laboratory/correlationAnalyzeR.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kumari Sonal Choudhary ◽  
Eoin Fahy ◽  
Kevin Coakley ◽  
Manish Sud ◽  
Mano R Maurya ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTWith the advent of high throughput mass spectrometric methods, metabolomics has emerged as an essential area of research in biomedicine with the potential to provide deep biological insights into normal and diseased functions in physiology. However, to achieve the potential offered by metabolomics measures, there is a need for biologist-friendly integrative analysis tools that can transform data into mechanisms that relate to phenotypes. Here, we describe MetENP, an R package, and a user-friendly web application deployed at the Metabolomics Workbench site extending the metabolomics enrichment analysis to include species-specific pathway analysis, pathway enrichment scores, gene-enzyme information, and enzymatic activities of the significantly altered metabolites. MetENP provides a highly customizable workflow through various user-specified options and includes support for all metabolite species with available KEGG pathways. MetENPweb is a web application for calculating metabolite and pathway enrichment analysis.Availability and ImplementationThe MetENP package is freely available from Metabolomics Workbench GitHub: (https://github.com/metabolomicsworkbench/MetENP), the web application, is freely available at (https://www.metabolomicsworkbench.org/data/analyze.php)


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu Amanda Guo ◽  
Mei Mei Chang ◽  
Anders Jacobsen Skanderup

AbstractSummaryRecurrence and clustering of somatic mutations (hotspots) in cancer genomes may indicate positive selection and involvement in tumorigenesis. MutSpot performs genome-wide inference of mutation hotspots in non-coding and regulatory DNA of cancer genomes. MutSpot performs feature selection across hundreds of epigenetic and sequence features followed by estimation of position and patient-specific background somatic mutation probabilities. MutSpot is user-friendly, works on a standard workstation, and scales to thousands of cancer genomes.Availability and implementationMutSpot is implemented as an R package and is available at https://github.com/skandlab/MutSpot/Supplementary informationSupplementary data are available at https://github.com/skandlab/MutSpot/


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maxime Meylan ◽  
Etienne Becht ◽  
Catherine Sautès-Fridman ◽  
Aurélien de Reyniès ◽  
Wolf H. Fridman ◽  
...  

AbstractSummaryWe previously reported MCP-counter and mMCP-counter, methods that allow precise estimation of the immune and stromal composition of human and murine samples from bulk transcriptomic data, but they were only distributed as R packages. Here, we report webMCP-counter, a user-friendly web interface to allow all users to use these methods, regardless of their proficiency in the R programming language.Availability and ImplementationFreely available from http://134.157.229.105:3838/webMCP/. Website developed with the R package shiny. Source code available from GitHub: https://github.com/FPetitprez/webMCP-counter.


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. 113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Venexia M Walker ◽  
Neil M Davies ◽  
Gibran Hemani ◽  
Jie Zheng ◽  
Philip C Haycock ◽  
...  

Mendelian randomization (MR) uses genetic information to strengthen causal inference concerning the effect of exposures on outcomes. This method has a broad range of applications, including investigating risk factors and appraising potential targets for intervention. MR-Base has become established as a freely accessible, online platform, which combines a database of complete genome-wide association study results with an interface for performing Mendelian randomization and sensitivity analyses. This allows the user to explore millions of potentially causal associations. MR-Base is available as a web application or as an R package. The technical aspects of the tool have previously been documented in the literature. The present article is complimentary to this as it focuses on the applied aspects. Specifically, we describe how MR-Base can be used in several ways, including to perform novel causal analyses, replicate results and enable transparency, amongst others. We also present three use cases, which demonstrate important applications of Mendelian randomization and highlight the benefits of using MR-Base for these types of analyses.


2020 ◽  
Vol 79 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. 1405.1-1406
Author(s):  
F. Morton ◽  
J. Nijjar ◽  
C. Goodyear ◽  
D. Porter

Background:The American College of Rheumatology (ACR) and the European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR) individually and collaboratively have produced/recommended diagnostic classification, response and functional status criteria for a range of different rheumatic diseases. While there are a number of different resources available for performing these calculations individually, currently there are no tools available that we are aware of to easily calculate these values for whole patient cohorts.Objectives:To develop a new software tool, which will enable both data analysts and also researchers and clinicians without programming skills to calculate ACR/EULAR related measures for a number of different rheumatic diseases.Methods:Criteria that had been developed by ACR and/or EULAR that had been approved for the diagnostic classification, measurement of treatment response and functional status in patients with rheumatoid arthritis were identified. Methods were created using the R programming language to allow the calculation of these criteria, which were incorporated into an R package. Additionally, an R/Shiny web application was developed to enable the calculations to be performed via a web browser using data presented as CSV or Microsoft Excel files.Results:acreular is a freely available, open source R package (downloadable fromhttps://github.com/fragla/acreular) that facilitates the calculation of ACR/EULAR related RA measures for whole patient cohorts. Measures, such as the ACR/EULAR (2010) RA classification criteria, can be determined using precalculated values for each component (small/large joint counts, duration in days, normal/abnormal acute-phase reactants, negative/low/high serology classification) or by providing “raw” data (small/large joint counts, onset/assessment dates, ESR/CRP and CCP/RF laboratory values). Other measures, including EULAR response and ACR20/50/70 response, can also be calculated by providing the required information. The accompanying web application is included as part of the R package but is also externally hosted athttps://fragla.shinyapps.io/shiny-acreular. This enables researchers and clinicians without any programming skills to easily calculate these measures by uploading either a Microsoft Excel or CSV file containing their data. Furthermore, the web application allows the incorporation of additional study covariates, enabling the automatic calculation of multigroup comparative statistics and the visualisation of the data through a number of different plots, both of which can be downloaded.Figure 1.The Data tab following the upload of data. Criteria are calculated by the selecting the appropriate checkbox.Figure 2.A density plot of DAS28 scores grouped by ACR/EULAR 2010 RA classification. Statistical analysis has been performed and shows a significant difference in DAS28 score between the two groups.Conclusion:The acreular R package facilitates the easy calculation of ACR/EULAR RA related disease measures for whole patient cohorts. Calculations can be performed either from within R or by using the accompanying web application, which also enables the graphical visualisation of data and the calculation of comparative statistics. We plan to further develop the package by adding additional RA related criteria and by adding ACR/EULAR related measures for other rheumatic disorders.Disclosure of Interests:Fraser Morton: None declared, Jagtar Nijjar Shareholder of: GlaxoSmithKline plc, Consultant of: Janssen Pharmaceuticals UK, Employee of: GlaxoSmithKline plc, Paid instructor for: Janssen Pharmaceuticals UK, Speakers bureau: Janssen Pharmaceuticals UK, AbbVie, Carl Goodyear: None declared, Duncan Porter: None declared


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen G. Gaffney ◽  
Jeffrey P. Townsend

ABSTRACTSummaryPathScore quantifies the level of enrichment of somatic mutations within curated pathways, applying a novel approach that identifies pathways enriched across patients. The application provides several user-friendly, interactive graphic interfaces for data exploration, including tools for comparing pathway effect sizes, significance, gene-set overlap and enrichment differences between projects.Availability and ImplementationWeb application available at pathscore.publichealth.yale.edu. Site implemented in Python and MySQL, with all major browsers supported. Source code available at github.com/sggaffney/pathscore with a GPLv3 [email protected] InformationAdditional documentation can be found at http://pathscore.publichealth.yale.edu/faq.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vasily V. Grinev ◽  
Mikalai M. Yatskou ◽  
Victor V. Skakun ◽  
Maryna K. Chepeleva ◽  
Petr V. Nazarov

AbstractMotivationModern methods of whole transcriptome sequencing accurately recover nucleotide sequences of RNA molecules present in cells and allow for determining their quantitative abundances. The coding potential of such molecules can be estimated using open reading frames (ORF) finding algorithms, implemented in a number of software packages. However, these algorithms show somewhat limited accuracy, are intended for single-molecule analysis and do not allow selecting proper ORFs in the case of long mRNAs containing multiple ORF candidates.ResultsWe developed a computational approach, corresponding machine learning model and a package, dedicated to automatic identification of the ORFs in large sets of human mRNA molecules. It is based on vectorization of nucleotide sequences into features, followed by classification using a random forest. The predictive model was validated on sets of human mRNA molecules from the NCBI RefSeq and Ensembl databases and demonstrated almost 95% accuracy in detecting true ORFs. The developed methods and pre-trained classification model were implemented in a powerful ORFhunteR computational tool that performs an automatic identification of true ORFs among large set of human mRNA molecules.Availability and implementationThe developed open-source R package ORFhunteR is available for the community at GitHub repository (https://github.com/rfctbio-bsu/ORFhunteR), from Bioconductor (https://bioconductor.org/packages/devel/bioc/html/ORFhunteR.html) and as a web application (http://orfhunter.bsu.by).


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. 113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Venexia M Walker ◽  
Neil M Davies ◽  
Gibran Hemani ◽  
Jie Zheng ◽  
Philip C Haycock ◽  
...  

Mendelian randomization (MR) estimates the causal effect of exposures on outcomes by exploiting genetic variation to address confounding and reverse causation. This method has a broad range of applications, including investigating risk factors and appraising potential targets for intervention. MR-Base has become established as a freely accessible, online platform, which combines a database of complete genome-wide association study results with an interface for performing Mendelian randomization and sensitivity analyses. This allows the user to explore millions of potentially causal associations. MR-Base is available as a web application or as an R package. The technical aspects of the tool have previously been documented in the literature. The present article is complementary to this as it focuses on the applied aspects. Specifically, we describe how MR-Base can be used in several ways, including to perform novel causal analyses, replicate results and enable transparency, amongst others. We also present three use cases, which demonstrate important applications of Mendelian randomization and highlight the benefits of using MR-Base for these types of analyses.


Author(s):  
Muhammad Ahmad Amin ◽  
Saqib Saeed

Amongst open-source e-learning systems, WebGoat, a progression of OWASP, provides some room for teaching the penetration testing techniques. Yet, it is a major concern of its learners as to whether the WebGoat interface is user-friendly enough to help them acquaint themselves of the desired Web application security knowledge. This chapter encompasses a heuristic evaluation of this application to acquire the usability of contemporary version of WebGoat. In this context of evaluation, the in-house formal lab testing of WebGoat was conducted by the authors. The results highlight some important issues and usability problems that frequently pop-up in the contemporary version. The research results would be pivotal to the embedding of an operational as well as user-friendly interface for its future version.


Author(s):  
Matthew Carlucci ◽  
Algimantas Kriščiūnas ◽  
Haohan Li ◽  
Povilas Gibas ◽  
Karolis Koncevičius ◽  
...  

Abstract Motivation Biological rhythmicity is fundamental to almost all organisms on Earth and plays a key role in health and disease. Identification of oscillating signals could lead to novel biological insights, yet its investigation is impeded by the extensive computational and statistical knowledge required to perform such analysis. Results To address this issue, we present DiscoRhythm (Discovering Rhythmicity), a user-friendly application for characterizing rhythmicity in temporal biological data. DiscoRhythm is available as a web application or an R/Bioconductor package for estimating phase, amplitude, and statistical significance using four popular approaches to rhythm detection (Cosinor, JTK Cycle, ARSER, and Lomb-Scargle). We optimized these algorithms for speed, improving their execution times up to 30-fold to enable rapid analysis of -omic-scale datasets in real-time. Informative visualizations, interactive modules for quality control, dimensionality reduction, periodicity profiling, and incorporation of experimental replicates make DiscoRhythm a thorough toolkit for analyzing rhythmicity. Availability and Implementation The DiscoRhythm R package is available on Bioconductor (https://bioconductor.org/packages/DiscoRhythm), with source code available on GitHub (https://github.com/matthewcarlucci/DiscoRhythm) under a GPL-3 license. The web application is securely deployed over HTTPS (https://disco.camh.ca) and is freely available for use worldwide. Local instances of the DiscoRhythm web application can be created using the R package or by deploying the publicly available Docker container (https://hub.docker.com/r/mcarlucci/discorhythm). Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


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