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1.
Comput Biol Chem ; 78: 382-388, 2019 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30630677

ABSTRACT

The microRNA identification step is a part of a plant analytic pipeline. Researches on microRNA identification have been focused extensively on precision, recall, f-measure, and accuracy of computational techniques. However, as the database becomes larger, these computational techniques cannot reduce time complexity to handle the growth. As a result, the identification step becomes a bottleneck in the pipeline. To reduce the response time of the identification step, we proposed a new technique that can discover predictive results faster than the traditional technique. Our technique is based on reordering sequences. The sequences that have higher potential score values will be executed with higher priority. The proposed technique can accelerate the study of plant miRNAs and also can be applied to other computational techniques as well.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , MicroRNAs/analysis , Plants/chemistry , Time Factors
2.
BMC Bioinformatics ; 13 Suppl 17: S9, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23282330

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Manual chemical data curation from publications is error-prone, time consuming, and hard to maintain up-to-date data sets. Automatic information extraction can be used as a tool to reduce these problems. Since chemical structures usually described in images, information extraction needs to combine structure image recognition and text mining together. RESULTS: We have developed ChemEx, a chemical information extraction system. ChemEx processes both text and images in publications. Text annotator is able to extract compound, organism, and assay entities from text content while structure image recognition enables translation of chemical raster images to machine readable format. A user can view annotated text along with summarized information of compounds, organism that produces those compounds, and assay tests. CONCLUSIONS: ChemEx facilitates and speeds up chemical data curation by extracting compounds, organisms, and assays from a large collection of publications. The software and corpus can be downloaded from http://www.biotec.or.th/isl/ChemEx.


Subject(s)
Data Mining/methods , Small Molecule Libraries/chemistry , Software , Information Systems
3.
BMC Genomics ; 13 Suppl 7: S16, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23281648

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have been known to play an important role in several biological processes in both animals and plants. Although several tools for miRNA and target identification are available, the number of tools tailored towards plants is limited, and those that are available have specific functionality, lack graphical user interfaces, and restrict the number of input sequences. Large-scale computational identifications of miRNAs and/or targets of several plants have been also reported. Their methods, however, are only described as flow diagrams, which require programming skills and the understanding of input and output of the connected programs to reproduce. RESULTS: To overcome these limitations and programming complexities, we proposed C-mii as a ready-made software package for both plant miRNA and target identification. C-mii was designed and implemented based on established computational steps and criteria derived from previous literature with the following distinguishing features. First, software is easy to install with all-in-one programs and packaged databases. Second, it comes with graphical user interfaces (GUIs) for ease of use. Users can identify plant miRNAs and targets via step-by-step execution, explore the detailed results from each step, filter the results according to proposed constraints in plant miRNA and target biogenesis, and export sequences and structures of interest. Third, it supplies bird's eye views of the identification results with infographics and grouping information. Fourth, in terms of functionality, it extends the standard computational steps of miRNA target identification with miRNA-target folding and GO annotation. Fifth, it provides helper functions for the update of pre-installed databases and automatic recovery. Finally, it supports multi-project and multi-thread management. CONCLUSIONS: C-mii constitutes the first complete software package with graphical user interfaces enabling computational identification of both plant miRNA genes and miRNA targets. With the provided functionalities, it can help accelerate the study of plant miRNAs and targets, especially for small and medium plant molecular labs without bioinformaticians. C-mii is freely available at http://www.biotec.or.th/isl/c-mii for both Windows and Ubuntu Linux platforms.


Subject(s)
MicroRNAs/metabolism , Plants/genetics , Software , Databases, Factual , Internet , MicroRNAs/chemistry , MicroRNAs/genetics , Nucleic Acid Conformation , RNA Folding , User-Computer Interface
4.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 37(Web Server issue): W417-21, 2009 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19465389

ABSTRACT

Domain combination provides important clues to the roles of protein domains in protein function, interaction and evolution. We have developed a web server d-Omix (a Mixer of Protein Domain Analysis Tools) aiming as a unified platform to analyze, compare and visualize protein data sets in various aspects of protein domain combinations. With InterProScan files for protein sets of interest provided by users, the server incorporates four services for domain analyses. First, it constructs protein phylogenetic tree based on a distance matrix calculated from protein domain architectures (DAs), allowing the comparison with a sequence-based tree. Second, it calculates and visualizes the versatility, abundance and co-presence of protein domains via a domain graph. Third, it compares the similarity of proteins based on DA alignment. Fourth, it builds a putative protein network derived from domain-domain interactions from DOMINE. Users may select a variety of input data files and flexibly choose domain search tools (e.g. hmmpfam, superfamily) for a specific analysis. Results from the d-Omix could be interactively explored and exported into various formats such as SVG, JPG, BMP and CSV. Users with only protein sequences could prepare an InterProScan file using a service provided by the server as well. The d-Omix web server is freely available at http://www.biotec.or.th/isl/Domix.


Subject(s)
Protein Structure, Tertiary , Software , Computer Graphics , Phylogeny , Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs , Proteins/classification , Proteins/genetics , Proteomics
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