The Cancer Genomics Linkage Application has been presented at Bio-IT World Asia 2013
The Cancer Genomics Linkage Application will enable the integration and re-use of the cancer genomics data available from public repositories such as the International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC). This will be accomplished through the capability being developed by the “Early Activity” of the Genomics Virtual Laboratory (GVL-EA). It will enable researchers, such as Professors Andrew Biankin, John Mattick (Garvan Institute for Medical Research) or Sean Grimmond (Queensland Centre for Medical Genomics), to access genomic datasets of international importance and to integrate them with their own clinical and genomic datasets in order to explore, discover and validate key genomic abnormality that cause cancer. The product will further provide the mechanism for such researchers to publish and to make available their analysis for re-use by the community.
Download the application from here.
Thursday, 30 May 2013
Wednesday, 29 May 2013
Video: Dr Mark Cowley talks about integrating, transforming and sharing "omics" data through workflows
Integrating, transforming and sharing data through workflows
Dr Mark Cowley from the Garvan Institute describes the benefits that the "Cancer Genomics Linkage Application" brings to researchers of the Australian Pancreatic Cancer Genome Initiative led by Professor Sean Grimmond and Andrew Biankin.
Tuesday, 21 May 2013
Video: Professor Andrew Biankin talks about integrating, transforming and sharing data to fight cancer
Integrating, transforming and sharing data to fight cancer
Professor Andrew Biankin from the Garvan Institute discusses the importance of empowering clinician and biologist researchers through the use of the Cancer Genomics Linkage Application to help them fighting cancer.
Friday, 15 March 2013
Final Product
The Cancer Genomics Linkage Application funded by ANDS enables the
re-use and integration of data available from public repositories such as the
ICGC variant database or the DrugBank drug and drug target database by
leveraging the Genomics Virtual Lab capability on the research cloud. Researchers, such as Professor Andrew Biankin
and colleagues from the Garvan Institute for Medical Research are now able to
access genomic datasets of international importance and to integrate them with
their own clinical and genomic datasets in order to explore, discover and
validate key genomic abnormalities that cause cancer, using user friendly
computational workflows. The project further provides the mechanism for such
researchers to publish and to make available their analysis for re-use by the
community.
The solutions developed for this project consists of
- Collection Manager
- Third Party Solution BioMAJ
- Data Galaxy Servlet
- Galaxy Data Link Tool
- Galaxy Server
- Workflow Galaxy Servlet
- Automatic generation of collections descriptions and their submission to RDA
- OAI-PMH Server
as shown and referenced in Figure
1 "Overall Overview" and described in detail in the following.
Figure 1: Overall Overview |
1. Collection Manager:
The Collection Manager is a web interface accessing a MySQL database that allows Galaxy administrators and users to edit and to curate collection (data), service (Galaxy instance) and workflow descriptions. Metadata of the collection and workflow descriptions (e.g. title, list of associated sites, collection rights, ANZSRC Codes) can be modified. Furthermore the Collection Manager allows them to publish workflow descriptions to RDA. A detailed user guide can be found here.Figure 2: Welcome to the Collection Manager Interface |
2. Integration of Third Party Solution BioMAJ for Data Synchronisation:
The download scheduler BioMAJ is used to mirror reference datasets such
as ICGC, Drugbank, etc. from public repositories. BioMAJ Watcher is the web interface. A shell script has been
developed to automatically send a Post request to the Data Galaxy Servlet when
downloading or updating a data library using BioMAJ. The Data Galaxy Servlet is
described in the following section.
Figure 3: BioMAJ Watcher web Interface - general functionalities |
3. Data Galaxy Servlet:
The Data Galaxy Servlet is a Java servlet that creates a new record accessible by the Collection Manager containing all the information and metadata related to the mirrored reference dataset (Figure 4). An email informs the owner that the reference dataset description is ready to be modified and published to RDA.Figure 4: Collection Manager - Data Library Overview |
4. Galaxy Data Link Tool:
The Galaxy Data Link Tool is a script written in Python that links the reference datasets downloaded by BioMAJ with Galaxy (Figure 5). This tool uploads the specified data files as a Galaxy Data Library resource. The files are linked to the specified data path. If the specified path consists of a directory of files, this directory structure will be automatically mirrored in Galaxy. This tool can be used in conjunction as a post-process step with the data synchronisation tool BioMAJ.Figure 5: Data Libraries in Galaxy linked by Galaxy Data Link Tool |
5. Galaxy Server:
To allow automated feeds of workflow RIF-CS records from Galaxy to RDA an extra button has been implemented in Galaxy as shown in Figure 6. To implement this button, the galaxy-dist code hosted on BitBucket was forked and the code was modified. The button initiates a POST request to the Workflow Galaxy Servlet which contains all the information and metadata related to the published workflow. The Workflow Galaxy Servlet is described in the following section.Figure 6: New Galaxy feature: Publish workflow to RDA |
6. Workflow Galaxy Servlet:
The Workfow Galaxy Servlet is a Java servlet which manages requests initiated through the mentioned Galaxy server. The servlet creates a new record accessible via the Collection Manager (Figure 7) that contains all the information and metadata related to the Galaxy workflow (Figure 8). An email informs the owner that the workflow description is ready to be modified and published to RDA.
Figure 7: Workflow description entry with the Collection Manager |
Figure 8: Galaxy Workflow |
7. Automatic generation of collections descriptions and their submission to RDA:
Metadata stored in the MySQL database are aggregated to form a collection description and written into a compliant RIF-CS xml using the ANDS supplied RIF-CS Java library. Persistent record identifiers are assigned and the RIF-CS files made accessible to a RDA harvest data source.8. OAI-PMH Server (Records indexing):
The OAI-PMH (Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting) server allows RIF-CS xml files generated by the Collection Manager to be exposed as items in an OAI data repository and made available for harvesting by RDA. Once the collection descriptions are harvested, they will be available through RDA as shown in Figure 9 below.Figure 9: Research Data Australia - Published Data Library "International Cancer Genome Consortium" |
The Cancer Genomics Linkage Application has been developed and tested on
a development server from the Genomics Virtual Laboratory Project, while the production
servers are being deployed, tuned and configured on the Research Cloud. Some of
the data sources and tools are currently available at the Garvan Institute and
will be deployed to the other GVL nodes as they become available during the
year 2013. The variant detection workflow developed for the Garvan Institute
will be made publicly available and published on the RDA as soon as the tools
developed by Professor Sean Grimmond’s group are published in the research
literature.
Licensing
All documents and source code is made available under GPLv3 licence via Google Code - Project AP27 Cancer Genomics Linkage Application.
Thursday, 14 March 2013
User Acceptance Testing
In the final phase of this project our developed application was assessed by users representing three user groups. The following describes the test users; tasks each user group performed with this
application, and the feedback and outcome from the user acceptance test.
Test user (groups)
User 1 is a postdoc from the department of
Computing and Information Systems at the University of Melbourne. This user is a representative of the general Bioinformatician that has both basic biological knowledge and adept programming skills.
User 2 is a postdoc from the University of
Queensland, representing biologists and clinicians who
want to easily integrate their own research data with datasets from multiple
data sources and analyse the data. This user group are generally researchers who have very limited or no programming skills.
User 3 a system administrator from the University
of Queensland. This user represents the GVL Galaxy site
administrator who works primarily on the server side, managing the Galaxy workflow system, environment and data
libraries.
Tests performed by users
User 1 - the main task for this user group is to design and generate scientific workflows/protocols using the Galaxy workflow system. Then publish these workflows with the research community so that other researchers can apply it to their own data.
User 2 - the main task or this user group is to reuse existing workflows for their own research, modify existing workflows and create new workflows. Additional important features for this user group include the:
- ability to publish and cite workflows.
- ability to assign a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) to workflows .
- ability to rerun shared workflows and cite them using the DOI in their publications.
- ability to generate important datasets for the community and share them through Galaxy.
User 3 - the main task or this user group is to manage and update the data libraries shared with the community via the Galaxy workflow system. This user works primarily on the server side on tasks such as configuring user, tool or data repository access.
Testing outcomes
The Collection
Manager has been introduced to User 1 via video conference and in person to
Users 2 and 3. All functionalities have been presented to all users.
User testing identified some issues from the Collection Manager, the main issues were:
- concurrent access to data records in the Collection manager result in database errors when saving the record
- email notification functionality
Individual User Experiences
User 1 found
the Collection Manager interface very user friendly and easy to use. User 1 comments that the application will be another means for them to promote their Galaxy workflows in the near future. This will increase awareness of their workflows further in the research community. An account has been created for this user on the production server and they have published two workflows to RDA using the Collection Manager.
User 2 found the Collection Manager impressive. In their opinion it is a very useful tool to easily share and promote workflows with the research community. An account has been created for them on the production server and this user will spend a couple of days testing the Collection Manager to see how it could be merged with their current working style.
User 2 found the Collection Manager impressive. In their opinion it is a very useful tool to easily share and promote workflows with the research community. An account has been created for them on the production server and this user will spend a couple of days testing the Collection Manager to see how it could be merged with their current working style.
User 2 expressed further interest in the DOI minting option provided by the Collection Manager. This feature was identified as a major advantage to using the application, which is not provided by the Galaxy workflow system. Further discussion with User
2 needs to take place to evaluate: when should a workflow be assigned a DOI during the publishing process.
User 3 who has a background in teaching Web Interface design found the Collection Manager Interface
very easy to understand and use. They also found value in using this interface to help the public identify which Galaxy instances are available on the web and what data libraries and workflows they host. Many public users do not know
where to go to use specific tools with specific data. Having a general
repository indexed by Google will ease this process. In addition, User 3 raised a few points for the web-interface that include providing more help text for fields such as ANZSRC and Rights when users are creating a Data record. These changes are currently being addressed.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)