scholarly journals HeatMapViewer: interactive display of 2D data in biology

F1000Research ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 48 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guy Yachdav ◽  
Maximilian Hecht ◽  
Metsada Pasmanik-Chor ◽  
Adva Yeheskel ◽  
Burkhard Rost

Summary: The HeatMapViewer is a BioJS component that lays-out and renders two-dimensional (2D) plots or heat maps that are ideally suited to visualize matrix formatted data in biology such as for the display of microarray experiments or the outcome of mutational studies and the study of SNP-like sequence variants. It can be easily integrated into documents and provides a powerful, interactive way to visualize heat maps in web applications. The software uses a scalable graphics technology that adapts the visualization component to any required resolution, a useful feature for a presentation with many different data-points. The component can be applied to present various biological data types. Here, we present two such cases – showing gene expression data and visualizing mutability landscape analysis.Availability: https://github.com/biojs/biojs; http://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7706.

Entropy ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 20 (10) ◽  
pp. 764 ◽  
Author(s):  
John McCamley ◽  
William Denton ◽  
Andrew Arnold ◽  
Peter Raffalt ◽  
Jennifer Yentes

Sample entropy (SE) has relative consistency using biologically-derived, discrete data >500 data points. For certain populations, collecting this quantity is not feasible and continuous data has been used. The effect of using continuous versus discrete data on SE is unknown, nor are the relative effects of sampling rate and input parameters m (comparison vector length) and r (tolerance). Eleven subjects walked for 10-minutes and continuous joint angles (480 Hz) were calculated for each lower-extremity joint. Data were downsampled (240, 120, 60 Hz) and discrete range-of-motion was calculated. SE was quantified for angles and range-of-motion at all sampling rates and multiple combinations of parameters. A differential relationship between joints was observed between range-of-motion and joint angles. Range-of-motion SE showed no difference; whereas, joint angle SE significantly decreased from ankle to knee to hip. To confirm findings from biological data, continuous signals with manipulations to frequency, amplitude, and both were generated and underwent similar analysis to the biological data. In general, changes to m, r, and sampling rate had a greater effect on continuous compared to discrete data. Discrete data was robust to sampling rate and m. It is recommended that different data types not be compared and discrete data be used for SE.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew P. Boughton ◽  
Ryan P. Welch ◽  
Matthew Flickinger ◽  
Peter VandeHaar ◽  
Daniel Taliun ◽  
...  

AbstractLocusZoom.js is a JavaScript library for creating interactive web-based visualizations of genetic association study results. It can display one or more traits in the context of relevant biological data (such as gene models and other genomic annotation), and allows interactive refinement of analysis models (by selecting linkage disequilibrium reference panels, identifying sets of likely causal variants, or comparisons to the GWAS catalog). It can be embedded in web pages to enable data sharing and exploration. Views can be customized and extended to display other data types such as phenome-wide association study (PheWAS) results, chromatin co-accessibility, or eQTL measurements. A new web upload service harmonizes datasets, adds annotations, and makes it easy to explore user-provided result sets.AvailabilityLocusZoom.js is open-source software under a permissive MIT license. Code and documentation are available at: https://github.com/statgen/locuszoom/. Installable packages are also distributed via NPM. Additional features are provided as standalone libraries to promote reuse. Use with your own GWAS results at https://my.locuszoom.org/[email protected]


2010 ◽  
Vol 08 (03) ◽  
pp. 593-606 ◽  
Author(s):  
EKATERINA KOTELNIKOVA ◽  
ANTON YURYEV ◽  
ILYA MAZO ◽  
NIKOLAI DARASELIA

Heterogeneous high-throughput biological data become readily available for various diseases. The amount of data points generated by such experiments does not allow manual integration of the information to design the most optimal therapy for a disease. We describe a novel computational workflow for designing therapy using Ariadne Genomics Pathway Studio software. We use publically available microarray experiments for glioblastoma and automatically constructed ResNet and ChemEffect databases to exemplify how to find potentially effective chemicals for glioblastoma — the disease yet without effective treatment. Our first approach involved construction of signaling pathway affected in glioblastoma using scientific literature and data available in ResNet database. Compounds known to affect multiple proteins in this pathway were found in ChemEffect database. Another approach involved analysis of differential expression in glioblastoma patients using Sub-Network Enrichment Analysis (SNEA). SNEA identified angiogenesis-related protein Cyr61 as the major positive regulator upstream of genes differentially expressed in glioblastoma. Using our findings, we then identified breast cancer drug Fulvestrant as a major inhibitor of glioblastoma pathway as well as Cyr61. This suggested Fulvestrant as a potential treatment against glioblastoma. We further show how to increase efficacy of glioblastoma treatment by finding optimal combinations of Fulvestrant with other drugs.


F1000Research ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leonardo A. Saravia

Multifractals have been applied to characterize complex communities in a spatial context. They were developed for nonlinear systems and are particularly suited to capture multiplicative processes observed in ecological systems. Multifractals characterize variability in a scale-independent way within an experimental range. I have developed an open-source software package to estimate multifractals using a box-counting algorithm (available from https://github.com/lsaravia/mfsba and permanently available at doi: 10.5281/zenodo.8481). The software is specially designed for two dimensional (2D) images such as the ones obtained from remote sensing, but other 2D data types can also be analyzed. Additionally I developed a new metric to analyzemultispecies spatial patterns with multifractals: spatial rank surface, which is included in the software.


2012 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 53-67 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peng Sun ◽  
Jiong Guo ◽  
Jan Baumbach

Summary The explosion of biological data has largely influenced the focus of today’s biology research. Integrating and analysing large quantity of data to provide meaningful insights has become the main challenge to biologists and bioinformaticians. One major problem is the combined data analysis of data from different types, such as phenotypes and genotypes. This data is modelled as bi-partite graphs where nodes correspond to the different data points, mutations and diseases for instance, and weighted edges relate to associations between them. Bi-clustering is a special case of clustering designed for partitioning two different types of data simultaneously. We present a bi-clustering approach that solves the NP-hard weighted bi-cluster editing problem by transforming a given bi-partite graph into a disjoint union of bi-cliques. Here we contribute with an exact algorithm that is based on fixed-parameter tractability. We evaluated its performance on artificial graphs first. Afterwards we exemplarily applied our Java implementation to data of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) data aiming for discovering new, previously unobserved geno-to-pheno associations. We believe that our results will serve as guidelines for further wet lab investigations. Generally our software can be applied to any kind of data that can be modelled as bi-partite graphs. To our knowledge it is the fastest exact method for weighted bi-cluster editing problem.


Mathematics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (7) ◽  
pp. 772
Author(s):  
Seonghun Kim ◽  
Seockhun Bae ◽  
Yinhua Piao ◽  
Kyuri Jo

Genomic profiles of cancer patients such as gene expression have become a major source to predict responses to drugs in the era of personalized medicine. As large-scale drug screening data with cancer cell lines are available, a number of computational methods have been developed for drug response prediction. However, few methods incorporate both gene expression data and the biological network, which can harbor essential information about the underlying process of the drug response. We proposed an analysis framework called DrugGCN for prediction of Drug response using a Graph Convolutional Network (GCN). DrugGCN first generates a gene graph by combining a Protein-Protein Interaction (PPI) network and gene expression data with feature selection of drug-related genes, and the GCN model detects the local features such as subnetworks of genes that contribute to the drug response by localized filtering. We demonstrated the effectiveness of DrugGCN using biological data showing its high prediction accuracy among the competing methods.


2020 ◽  
Vol 79 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. 216.2-217
Author(s):  
D. Hartl ◽  
M. Keller ◽  
A. Klenk ◽  
M. Murphy ◽  
M. Martinic ◽  
...  

Background:To explore the full therapeutic spectrum of a drug it is crucial to consider its potential effectiveness in all diseases. Serendipitous clinical observations have often shown that approved drugs and those in development to be efficacious in indications different to those originally tested for. Traditional approaches to match a drug candidate with possible indications are mostly based on matching drug mechanistic knowledge with disease pathophysiology. Proof-of-concept trials or elaborate pre-clinical studies in animal models do not allow for a broad assessment due to high costs and slow progress. Gene expression changes in patients or animal models represent a good proxy to comprehensively assess both disease and drug effects. Furthermore, this data type can be integrated with a plethora of publicly available data.Objectives:Generation of a novel in silico framework to support the selection and expansion of potential indications which associate with a compound or approved drug. The framework was exemplified by the clinical compound cenerimod, a potent, selective, and orally active sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor 1 modulator (Piali et al., 2017).Methods:A total of ~13’000 public patient gene expression datasets from ~140 diseases were evaluated against cenerimod gene expression data generated in mouse disease models. To improve comparability of studies across platforms and species, computer algorithms (neural networks) were trained and employed to reduce noise within the data sets and improve signal. The predicted response to cenerimod for individual patients was contrasted against clinical patient characteristics.Results:The neural network algorithm efficiently reduced experimental noise and improved sensitivity in the gene expression data. The results predicted cenerimod to be efficacious in several auto-immune diseases foremost SLE. Additionally, focused analysis on individual patients rather than disease cohorts revealed potential determinants predictive of maximal clinical response, with the highest predicted clinical response for cenerimod in patients with severe inflammatory endotype and/or high SLE Disease Activity Index (SLEDAI).Conclusion:Combining preclinical compound data with the wealth of public disease gene expression data, provides great potential to support indication selection. The novel in silico framework identified SLE as a prime potential indication for cenerimod and supported the cenerimod phase 2b clinical trial in patients with SLE (CARE study,NCT03742037).References:[1]Piali, L., Birker-Robaczewska, M., Lescop, C., Froidevaux, S., Schmitz, N., Morrison, K., … Nayler, O. (2017). Cenerimod, a novel selective S1P1 receptor modulator with unique signaling properties. Pharmacology Research & Perspectives, 5(6), 1–12.https://doi.org/10.1002/prp2.370Disclosure of Interests:Dominik Hartl Shareholder of: Idorsia shares, Employee of: Idorsia employee, Marcel Keller Shareholder of: Idorsia options/shares, Employee of: Idorsia employee, Axel Klenk Shareholder of: Idorsia option/shares, Employee of: Idorsia employee, Mark Murphy Shareholder of: Idorsia shares and stock options, Employee of: Idorsia employee, Marianne Martinic Shareholder of: Idorsia options/shares, Employee of: Idorsia employee, Gabin Pierlot Shareholder of: Idorsia options/shares, Employee of: Idorsia employee, Peter Groenen Shareholder of: Idorsia options/shares, Employee of: Idorsia employee, Daniel Strasser Shareholder of: Idorsia options/shares, Employee of: Idorsia employee


2016 ◽  
Vol 32 (11) ◽  
pp. 1740-1742 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ya Cui ◽  
Xiaowei Chen ◽  
Huaxia Luo ◽  
Zhen Fan ◽  
Jianjun Luo ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenlong Jia ◽  
Hechen Li ◽  
Shiying Li ◽  
Shuaicheng Li

ABSTRACTSummaryVisualizing integrated-level data from genomic research remains a challenge, as it requires sufficient coding skills and experience. Here, we present LandScapeoviz, a web-based application for interactive and real-time visualization of summarized genetic information. LandScape utilizes a well-designed file format that is capable of handling various data types, and offers a series of built-in functions to customize the appearance, explore results, and export high-quality diagrams that are available for publication.Availability and implementationLandScape is deployed at bio.oviz.org/demo-project/analyses/landscape for online use. Documentation and demo data are freely available on this website and GitHub (github.com/Nobel-Justin/Oviz-Bio-demo)[email protected]


F1000Research ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 709 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liis Kolberg ◽  
Uku Raudvere ◽  
Ivan Kuzmin ◽  
Jaak Vilo ◽  
Hedi Peterson

g:Profiler (https://biit.cs.ut.ee/gprofiler) is a widely used gene list functional profiling and namespace conversion toolset that has been contributing to reproducible biological data analysis already since 2007. Here we introduce the accompanying R package, gprofiler2, developed to facilitate programmatic access to g:Profiler computations and databases via REST API. The gprofiler2 package provides an easy-to-use functionality that enables researchers to incorporate functional enrichment analysis into automated analysis pipelines written in R. The package also implements interactive visualisation methods to help to interpret the enrichment results and to illustrate them for publications. In addition, gprofiler2 gives access to the versatile gene/protein identifier conversion functionality in g:Profiler enabling to map between hundreds of different identifier types or orthologous species. The gprofiler2 package is freely available at the CRAN repository.


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