The Gaggle: An open-source software system for integrating bioinformatics software and data sources
Open Access
- 28 March 2006
- journal article
- software
- Published by Springer Nature in BMC Bioinformatics
- Vol. 7 (1) , 176
- https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2105-7-176
Abstract
Background: Systems biologists work with many kinds of data, from many different sources, using a variety of software tools. Each of these tools typically excels at one type of analysis, such as of microarrays, of metabolic networks and of predicted protein structure. A crucial challenge is to combine the capabilities of these (and other forthcoming) data resources and tools to create a data exploration and analysis environment that does justice to the variety and complexity of systems biology data sets. A solution to this problem should recognize that data types, formats and software in this high throughput age of biology are constantly changing.Results: In this paper we describe the Gaggle -a simple, open-source Java software environment that helps to solve the problem of software and database integration. Guided by the classic software engineering strategy ofseparation of concernsand a policy ofsemantic flexibility, it integrates existing popular programs and web resources into a user-friendly, easily-extended environment.We demonstrate that four simple data types (names, matrices, networks, and associative arrays) are sufficient to bring together diverse databases and software. We highlight some capabilities of the Gaggle with an exploration ofHelicobacter pyloripathogenesis genes, in which we identify a putative ricin-like protein -a discovery made possible by simultaneous data exploration using a wide range of publicly available data and a variety of popular bioinformatics software tools.Conclusion: We have integrated diverse databases (for example, KEGG, BioCyc, String) and software (Cytoscape, DataMatrixViewer, R statistical environment, and TIGR Microarray Expression Viewer). Through this loose coupling of diverse software and databases the Gaggle enables simultaneous exploration of experimental data (mRNA and protein abundance, protein-protein and protein-DNA interactions), functional associations (operon, chromosomal proximity, phylogenetic pattern), metabolic pathways (KEGG) and Pubmed abstracts (STRING web resource), creating an exploratory environment useful to 'web browser and spreadsheet biologists', to statistically savvy computational biologists, and those in between. The Gaggle uses Java RMI and Java Web Start technologies and can be found athttp://gaggle.systemsbiology.net.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Querying and computing with BioCyc databasesBioinformatics, 2005
- Taverna: a tool for the composition and enactment of bioinformatics workflowsBioinformatics, 2004
- Cytoscape: A Software Environment for Integrated Models of Biomolecular Interaction NetworksGenome Research, 2003
- Automated prediction of CASP-5 structures using the Robetta serverProteins-Structure Function and Bioinformatics, 2003
- The systems biology markup language (SBML): a medium for representation and exchange of biochemical network modelsBioinformatics, 2003
- A Life Scientist's Gateway to Distributed Data Management and Computing: The PathPort/ToolBus FrameworkOMICS: A Journal of Integrative Biology, 2003
- The KEGG DatabasePublished by Wiley ,2002
- Helicobacter pyloriInfectionNew England Journal of Medicine, 2002
- Integrated Access to Metabolic and Genomic DataJournal of Computational Biology, 1996
- On the criteria to be used in decomposing systems into modulesCommunications of the ACM, 1972