miRNA and validated/predicted target genes
4
0
Entering edit mode
@mauedealiceit-3511
Last seen 10.3 years ago
I posted the following question to R mailing-list and was adviced to contact the BioConductors team. I have to find humans miRNA sequences and the correspondent validated and/or predicted gene sequences. The only database I know of is http://mirecords.umn.edu/miRecords where all such information is accessed through a set of structured web site pages. I wonder whether R or C++ provides an interface to automatically extract such data from miRecords or any other similar database. I would greatly appreciate any suggestion even about other databases from where it is possible to get the same sort of data and s/w packages that facilitate database access. Sorry for my naive question. I am a physics postdoc... just jumped in the middle of a BioInformatic project. Thank you very much in advance, Maura Edelweiss tutti i telefonini TIM! [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
miRNA miRNA • 1.8k views
ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode
@sean-davis-490
Last seen 4 months ago
United States
On Wed, Jun 17, 2009 at 8:08 AM, <mauede@alice.it> wrote: > I posted the following question to R mailing-list and was adviced to > contact the BioConductors team. > > I have to find humans miRNA sequences and the correspondent validated > and/or predicted gene sequences. > The only database I know of is http://mirecords.umn.edu/miRecords where > all such information is accessed through a set of structured web site > pages. > I wonder whether R or C++ provides an interface to automatically extract > such data from miRecords or any other similar database. > Looks like there is a download link on the home base of miRecords that gives you an excel spreadsheet. > > I would greatly appreciate any suggestion even about other databases from > where it is possible to get the same sort of data and s/w packages that > facilitate database access. > mirBase (http://microrna.sanger.ac.uk/) is perhaps the largest? Again, mirBase offers downloads of tab-delimited text files. > > Sorry for my naive question. I am a physics postdoc... just jumped in the > middle of a BioInformatic project. > > Thank you very much in advance, > Maura Edelweiss > > > > tutti i telefonini TIM! > > > [[alternative HTML version deleted]] > > _______________________________________________ > Bioconductor mailing list > Bioconductor@stat.math.ethz.ch > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioconductor > Search the archives: > http://news.gmane.org/gmane.science.biology.informatics.conductor > [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode
@wacek-kusnierczyk-88
Last seen 10.3 years ago
mauede at alice.it wrote: > I posted the following question to R mailing-list and was adviced to contact the BioConductors team. > > I have to find humans miRNA sequences and the correspondent validated and/or predicted gene sequences. > The only database I know of is http://mirecords.umn.edu/miRecords where all such information is accessed through a set of structured web site pages. > I wonder whether R or C++ provides an interface to automatically extract such data from miRecords or any other similar database. > > I would greatly appreciate any suggestion even about other databases from where it is possible to get the same sort of data and s/w packages that facilitate database access. > > alternatively to mirecords, you can download fasta-formatted human (and other) mirs and targets from mirbase at sanger [1], and importing fasta to r should be an easy task for you. alternatively, there are database dumps available. i don't know of an r/bioc package targetted specifically at a mirna database; it's possible that the data are not available for programmatic access otherwise than through a bulk download (or html parsing, if you prefer...) vQ [1] http://microrna.sanger.ac.uk
ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode
@michal-okoniewski-2676
Last seen 10.3 years ago
-----Original Message----- From: bioconductor-bounces@stat.math.ethz.ch on behalf of Wacek Kusnierczyk Sent: Wed 6/17/2009 4:01 PM To: mauede at alice.it Cc: bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch Subject: Re: [BioC] miRNA and validated/predicted target genes mauede at alice.it wrote: > I posted the following question to R mailing-list and was adviced to contact the BioConductors team. > > I have to find humans miRNA sequences and the correspondent validated and/or predicted gene sequences. > The only database I know of is http://mirecords.umn.edu/miRecords where all such information is accessed through a set of structured web site pages. > I wonder whether R or C++ provides an interface to automatically extract such data from miRecords or any other similar database. > > I would greatly appreciate any suggestion even about other databases from where it is possible to get the same sort of data and s/w packages that facilitate database access. > > alternatively to mirecords, you can download fasta-formatted human (and other) mirs and targets from mirbase at sanger [1], and importing fasta to r should be an easy task for you. alternatively, there are database dumps available. i don't know of an r/bioc package targetted specifically at a mirna database; it's possible that the data are not available for programmatic access otherwise than through a bulk download (or html parsing, if you prefer...) vQ [1] http://microrna.sanger.ac.uk ================== I played with miRGen : http://www.diana.pcbi.upenn.edu/cgi- bin/miRGen/v3/Targets.cgi#Results (quite comprehensive, seems to include miranda and several other target databases) and TargetScan: http://www.targetscan.org/ but as Wacek wrote - there's no biomaRt-like interface (at least I did not see...) but a lot of fun with html/flat file parsing instead :) Cheers, Michal
ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode
Check out our package CORNA, published in Bioinformatics this year: http://bioinformatics.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/25/6/832 http://corna.sourceforge.net/ http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19181683 Thanks Mick -----Original Message----- From: bioconductor-bounces@stat.math.ethz.ch [mailto:bioconductor-bounces at stat.math.ethz.ch] On Behalf Of Michal Okoniewski Sent: 17 June 2009 15:26 To: Wacek Kusnierczyk; mauede at alice.it Cc: bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch Subject: Re: [BioC] miRNA and validated/predicted target genes -----Original Message----- From: bioconductor-bounces@stat.math.ethz.ch on behalf of Wacek Kusnierczyk Sent: Wed 6/17/2009 4:01 PM To: mauede at alice.it Cc: bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch Subject: Re: [BioC] miRNA and validated/predicted target genes mauede at alice.it wrote: > I posted the following question to R mailing-list and was adviced to contact the BioConductors team. > > I have to find humans miRNA sequences and the correspondent validated and/or predicted gene sequences. > The only database I know of is http://mirecords.umn.edu/miRecords where all such information is accessed through a set of structured web site pages. > I wonder whether R or C++ provides an interface to automatically extract such data from miRecords or any other similar database. > > I would greatly appreciate any suggestion even about other databases from where it is possible to get the same sort of data and s/w packages that facilitate database access. > > alternatively to mirecords, you can download fasta-formatted human (and other) mirs and targets from mirbase at sanger [1], and importing fasta to r should be an easy task for you. alternatively, there are database dumps available. i don't know of an r/bioc package targetted specifically at a mirna database; it's possible that the data are not available for programmatic access otherwise than through a bulk download (or html parsing, if you prefer...) vQ [1] http://microrna.sanger.ac.uk ================== I played with miRGen : http://www.diana.pcbi.upenn.edu/cgi-bin/miRGen/v3/Targets.cgi#Results (quite comprehensive, seems to include miranda and several other target databases) and TargetScan: http://www.targetscan.org/ but as Wacek wrote - there's no biomaRt-like interface (at least I did not see...) but a lot of fun with html/flat file parsing instead :) Cheers, Michal _______________________________________________ Bioconductor mailing list Bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioconductor Search the archives: http://news.gmane.org/gmane.science.biology.informatics.conductor
ADD REPLY
0
Entering edit mode
@michael-watson-iah-c-378
Last seen 10.3 years ago
CORNA gets it's miRNA target information either from miRBase targets or microRNA.org - however, you can load any data you want into it. The confirmed microRNA targets database I know about is Tarbase: http://diana.cslab.ece.ntua.gr/tarbase/ I'm sorry if I misread your intentions - CORNA works downstream of microRNA:gene target prediction, it relies on other software and/or databases to do that. However, if you simply want to read data from miRBase into R, then CORNA can do that. Thanks Mick -----Original Message----- From: mauede@alice.it [mailto:mauede@alice.it] Sent: Thu 18/06/2009 4:04 AM To: michael watson (IAH-C); Michal Okoniewski; Wacek Kusnierczyk Cc: bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch Subject: R: [BioC] miRNA and validated/predicted target genes I browsed through your paper. It looks like CORNA is not another pair (miRNA - target gene) prediction program like miRANDA and so on ... ? If I am guessing right (am I ... ?) then what is CORNA basing its miRNA -target_gene affinity score on ? In my mind I have the three phases that miRANDA uses to score such "affinity". Phase-1 implements some empirical Biology rules, phase-2 implements free energy minimization, phase-3 implements conservation of species. Each phase is a finer screening that assigns a score to the target match. The final score is the total. I cannot understand which criteria (empirical or computational) are at the base of CORNA assessment. Is it a synthesis of the predictions of the many programs like miRANDA (for instance many are referred in miRecords). How is the (miRNA-target_gene) prediction, from computational programs like miRANDA, accounted for by CORNA ? How is the biologists' (miRNA-target_gene) validation accounted for by CORNA ? I read it uses a number of statistical tests but I cannot figure out which data the statistics is applied to ... maybe because I am not familiar with the information stored in the databases mentioned in the paper. Thank you. Kind regards, Maura -----Original Message----- From: bioconductor-bounces@stat.math.ethz.ch [mailto:bioconductor-bounces at stat.math.ethz.ch] On Behalf Of Michal Okoniewski Sent: 17 June 2009 15:26 To: Wacek Kusnierczyk; mauede at alice.it Cc: bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch Subject: Re: [BioC] miRNA and validated/predicted target genes -----Original Message----- From: bioconductor-bounces@stat.math.ethz.ch on behalf of Wacek Kusnierczyk Sent: Wed 6/17/2009 4:01 PM To: mauede at alice.it Cc: bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch Subject: Re: [BioC] miRNA and validated/predicted target genes mauede at alice.it wrote: > I posted the following question to R mailing-list and was adviced to contact the BioConductors team. > > I have to find humans miRNA sequences and the correspondent validated and/or predicted gene sequences. > The only database I know of is http://mirecords.umn.edu/miRecords where all such information is accessed through a set of structured web site pages. > I wonder whether R or C++ provides an interface to automatically extract such data from miRecords or any other similar database. > > I would greatly appreciate any suggestion even about other databases from where it is possible to get the same sort of data and s/w packages that facilitate database access. > > alternatively to mirecords, you can download fasta-formatted human (and other) mirs and targets from mirbase at sanger [1], and importing fasta to r should be an easy task for you. alternatively, there are database dumps available. i don't know of an r/bioc package targetted specifically at a mirna database; it's possible that the data are not available for programmatic access otherwise than through a bulk download (or html parsing, if you prefer...) vQ [1] http://microrna.sanger.ac.uk ================== I played with miRGen : http://www.diana.pcbi.upenn.edu/cgi-bin/miRGen/v3/Targets.cgi#Results (quite comprehensive, seems to include miranda and several other target databases) and TargetScan: http://www.targetscan.org/ but as Wacek wrote - there's no biomaRt-like interface (at least I did not see...) but a lot of fun with html/flat file parsing instead :) Cheers, Michal _______________________________________________ Bioconductor mailing list Bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioconductor Search the archives: http://news.gmane.org/gmane.science.biology.informatics.conductor Alice Messenger ;-) chatti anche con gli amici di Windows Live Messenger e tutti i telefonini TIM! Vai su http://maileservizi.alice.it/alice_messenger/index.html?pmk=footer
ADD COMMENT

Login before adding your answer.

Traffic: 453 users visited in the last hour
Help About
FAQ
Access RSS
API
Stats

Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy.

Powered by the version 2.3.6