Nucleic Acids Research Advance Access originally published online on June 15, 2009
Nucleic Acids Research 2009 37(Web Server issue):W3-W5; doi:10.1093/nar/gkp531
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Nucleic Acids Research, 2009, Vol. 37, No. suppl_2 W3-W5
© 2009 The Author(s)
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Articles |
Evolution in bioinformatic resources: 2009 update on the Bioinformatics Links Directory
Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, 101 College Street, Suite 800, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5G 0A3
*To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel: +1 416 673 8511; Fax: +1 416 977 7446; Email: francis{at}oicr.on.ca
Received June 3, 2009. Revised June 4, 2009. Accepted June 5, 2009.
| ABSTRACT |
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All of the life science research web servers published in this and previous issues of Nucleic Acids Research, together with other useful tools, databases and resources for bioinformatics and molecular biology research are freely accessible online through the Bioinformatics Links Directory, http://bioinformatics.ca/links_directory/. Entirely dependent on user feedback and community input, the Bioinformatics Links Directory exemplifies an open access research tool and resource. With 112 websites featured in the July 2009 Web Server Issue of Nucleic Acids Research, the 2009 update brings the total number of servers listed in the Bioinformatics Links Directory close to an impressive 1400 links. A complete list of all links listed in this Nucleic Acids Research 2009 Web Server Issue can be accessed online at http://bioinfomatics.ca/links_directory/narweb2009/. The 2009 update of the Bioinformatics Links Directory, which includes the Web Server list and summaries, is also available online at the Nucleic Acids Research website, http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/.
| COMMENTARY |
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For 7 years now, Nucleic Acids Research has peer-reviewed and published a Web Server issue highlighting the latest web servers and open access bioinformatic tools available online to guide and aid research work. This year's Web Server Issue introduces an additional 112 web servers, 10 of which are server updates (Table 1). The complete listing of URLs cited in the 2009 Web Server Issue can be accessed online at the Nucleic Acids Research website, http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/, as well as at http://bioinfomatics.ca/links_directory/narweb2009/.
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In 2002, the Bioinformatics Links Directory was created as a repository for curated URLs to important bioinformatic tools, databases and general-purpose resources for bioinformatics and molecular biology research. Since 2005, the Bioinformatics Links Directory has partnered with Nucleic Acids Research to organize all of the Web Server issue published links in its comprehensive directory (1–4). As a public repository, the Bioinformatics Links Directory, http://bioinformatics.ca/links_directory/, serves as a go-to site for the research community seeking bioinformatic resource options. The 2009 Nucleic Acids Research Web Server update brings the total number of servers and tools listed in the Bioinformatics Links Directory close to 1400 unique links (Table 1). Each entry in the Directory contains a short description of the tool's function, as well as the accompanying PubMed citation and web server URL. The directory is organized by biological subject with subcategories of common tasks relevant to each subject listed. Subject categories and subcategories are also easily browsed and queried with a keyword search. The up-to-date complete listings accessible through the Bioinformatics Links Directory, including the Nucleic Acids Research 2009 web servers, can be accessed online at http://bioinfomatics.ca/links_directory/.
Reflecting back on the history of the NAR Web Server issue and the Bioinformatics Links Directory, and on informatics over the past few years, it is interesting to note how research and the field of bioinformatics have changed in such a short timeframe. Table 1 displays data on the number of web server URLs for each category and subcategory of the Bioinformatics Links Directory for the years 2006–2009. Many interesting trends reflective of parallel changes in research areas and technologies are observable. In many instances there are sharp spikes in the number of informatics tools available in a given biological area or specific to a particular task. For example, the number of tools for DNA – Structure and Sequence Feature Detection, Gene Regulation and Transcript Expression and Microarrays increased sizably between 2006 and 2007, most likely in response to the pervasive use of expression platforms and transcript analyses at that time (5,6) (Table 1). Similarly, as the research focus on small non-coding RNAs, microRNAs and other RNA species has intensified, so too has the number of bioinformatics web servers for Functional RNA analysis, particularly in 2008 and 2009 (Table 1). A steady increase in the number of useful informatics resources for Domain and Motif analysis, Interactions, Pathways and Enzyme analysis and Molecular Dynamics and Docking since 2006 has also been observed, in part due to the increased need for tools to aid researchers evaluating biology from a pathway or whole organism perspective. Indeed in 2008, a new subcategory for Network analysis was added to accommodate informatics tools and resources that take a systems approach to biological problems.
Prominent in research today has been the introduction and application of various next-generation sequencing platforms to a wide range of research problems from rapid de novo sequencing (7), to genomic evaluation of polymorphisms and other mutation events (8), and analyses of the transcriptome of various RNA macromolecules (9) and the epigenome (10). Given the quantity and variety of data being produced by these new high-throughput technologies, there is an increased need for tools in meta-data analysis, data integration and data mining that facilitate data exploration and provide opportunities for novel discoveries without the concomitant requirement for personal computational capacity. Accordingly, web servers introduced in the 2009 NAR Web Server Issue include several specialized web service interfaces such as those from the European Bioinformatics Institute (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/Tools/webservices/) and the DNA Data Bank of Japan (http://www.xml.nig.ac.jp/index.html) which provide remote computational power, as well as several data integration packages such as BioBIKE (http://biobike.csbc.vcu.edu/), which enable biologists with little programming expertise to combine tools, data and knowledge. Also introduced in this issue, were a host of online informatic resources for advanced text/data mining such as SENT (http://sent.dacya.ucm.es/) for detection of semantic features in text and LitInspector (http://www.litinspector.org/) for literature and signal transduction pathway mining in PubMed.
New to the Bioinformatics Links Directory in 2009 is the addition of Gene Set Analysis, a new subcategory under tools for Expression analysis (Table 1), addressing the need and introduction of new resources that facilitate data integration and functional evaluation of gene sets identified through expression or genome wide association studies. Example web servers include ToppGene Suite (http://toppgene.cchmc.org/) for functional enrichment, candidate gene prioritization and identification of novel disease genes in an interactome, and GeneCodis (http://genecodis.dacya.ucm.es/) for functional analysis of gene lists that integrates different data sources (microRNA, transcription factors, KEGG, user annotations, etc.) and finds patterns of interrelated annotations.
These historical perspectives are not unique or isolated occurrences. As new technologies and applications continue to be introduced and as new data become available, we will continue to see the development and update of specialized web servers and bioinformatic resources to accompany emerging, data intensive and biologically complex research needs. The Bioinformatics Links Directory, as an excellent example of a community-driven resource, will also continue to expand its resources in support of the research community seeking bioinformatic resource options. Suggestions for new links or updates and corrections to existing links at the Bioinformatics Links Directory are always welcome, and may be submitted through email directly to links{at}bioinformatics.ca.
| FUNDING |
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This work was conducted with the support of the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research through funding provided by the Government of Ontario. The Open Access publication charge for this paper has been waived by the Oxford University Press, in recognition of the work on behalf of the journal.
Conflict of interest statement. None declared.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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The authors wish to acknowledge the efforts of Nucleic Acids Research and the researchers and developers worldwide who invest considerable effort into ensuring that their research is freely accessible to all. The Bioinformatics Links Directory is a community resource built on this commitment to the spirit of open access. In particular, the authors would like to acknowledge all of the contributors to the Bioinformatics Links Directory for their valuable input and suggestions for improvements to the directory; these individuals are listed on the Acknowledgements page at http://bioinformatics.ca/links_directory/acknowledgements/.
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