BioMart – biological queries made easy
Ontario Institute for Cancer Research · European Bioinformatics Institute · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Biologists need to perform complex queries, often across a variety of databases. Typically, each data resource provides an advanced query interface, each of which must be learnt by the biologist before they can begin to query them. Frequently, more than one data source is required and for high-throughput analysis, cutting and pasting results between websites is certainly very time consuming. Therefore, many groups rely on local bioinformatics support to process queries by accessing the resource's programmatic interfaces if they exist. This is not an efficient solution in terms of cost and time. Instead, it would be better if the biologist only had to learn one generic interface. BioMart provides such a solution.
BioMart enables scientists to perform advanced querying of biological data sources through a single web interface. The power of the system comes from integrated querying of data sources regardless of their geographical locations. Once these queries have been defined, they may be automated with its "scripting at the click of a button" functionality. BioMart's capabilities are extended by integration with several widely used software packages such as BioConductor, DAS, Galaxy, Cytoscape, Taverna. In this paper, we describe all aspects of BioMart from a user's perspective and demonstrate how it can be used to solve real biological use cases such as SNP selection for candidate gene screening or annotation of microarray results.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 33.40
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 20
Authors
7- DSDamian Smedley
Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, European Bioinformatics Institute, Occupational Cancer Research Centre, Wellcome Trust
- SHSyed Haider
European Bioinformatics Institute, Wellcome Trust
- BBBenoît Ballester
European Bioinformatics Institute, Wellcome Trust
- RHRichard Holland
European Bioinformatics Institute, Wellcome Trust
- DLDarin London
Duke University
Topics & keywords
- Computer science
- Ensembl
- Interface (matter)
- Scalability
- UniProt
- User interface
- Software
- Bioconductor