BioWarehouse: a bioinformatics database warehouse toolkit
Open Access
- 23 March 2006
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in BMC Bioinformatics
- Vol. 7 (1) , 170
- https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2105-7-170
Abstract
Background This article addresses the problem of interoperation of heterogeneous bioinformatics databases. Results We introduce BioWarehouse, an open source toolkit for constructing bioinformatics database warehouses using the MySQL and Oracle relational database managers. BioWarehouse integrates its component databases into a common representational framework within a single database management system, thus enabling multi-database queries using the Structured Query Language (SQL) but also facilitating a variety of database integration tasks such as comparative analysis and data mining. BioWarehouse currently supports the integration of a pathway-centric set of databases including ENZYME, KEGG, and BioCyc, and in addition the UniProt, GenBank, NCBI Taxonomy, and CMR databases, and the Gene Ontology. Loader tools, written in the C and JAVA languages, parse and load these databases into a relational database schema. The loaders also apply a degree of semantic normalization to their respective source data, decreasing semantic heterogeneity. The schema supports the following bioinformatics datatypes: chemical compounds, biochemical reactions, metabolic pathways, proteins, genes, nucleic acid sequences, features on protein and nucleic-acid sequences, organisms, organism taxonomies, and controlled vocabularies. As an application example, we applied BioWarehouse to determine the fraction of biochemically characterized enzyme activities for which no sequences exist in the public sequence databases. The answer is that no sequence exists for 36% of enzyme activities for which EC numbers have been assigned. These gaps in sequence data significantly limit the accuracy of genome annotation and metabolic pathway prediction, and are a barrier for metabolic engineering. Complex queries of this type provide examples of the value of the data warehousing approach to bioinformatics research. Conclusion BioWarehouse embodies significant progress on the database integration problem for bioinformatics.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- EnsMart: A Generic System for Fast and Flexible Access to Biological DataGenome Research, 2004
- From Annotated Genomes to Metabolic Flux Models and Kinetic Parameter FittingOMICS: A Journal of Integrative Biology, 2003
- KEGG: Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and GenomesNucleic Acids Research, 2000
- Database resources of the National Center for Biotechnology InformationNucleic Acids Research, 2000
- Heterogeneous Molecular Biology DatabasesJournal of Computational Biology, 1995
- Challenges in Integrating Biological Data SourcesJournal of Computational Biology, 1995
- A Strategy for Database InteroperationJournal of Computational Biology, 1995
- Prototype Implementation of the Integrated Genomic DatabaseComputers and Biomedical Research, 1994
- Genome Informatics I: Community DatabasesJournal of Computational Biology, 1994
- Federated database systems for managing distributed, heterogeneous, and autonomous databasesACM Computing Surveys, 1990