|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
| U. of Iowa | Bio::Neos, Inc. | CBCB | CLCG | TrAPSS2 Web Interface | Source Download | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Here are some of the beta versions of programs for TrAPSS2. These are meant for testing only, no important data should be entered with any of these programs because it may disappear at any time. But we would like testing of all of the functionality of these programs, so use them as thorough as possible. Thanks! - CLCG TrAPSS Team What is TrAPSS??TrAPSS stands for Transcript and Annotation Prioritization Screening System. It is a system comprised of several tools written by researchers at the Coordinated Lab for Computational Genomics in the University of Iowa. The system aims to aid scientists who are searching for the genetic mutation or mutations that are linked to expression of a disease phentotype. The system offers support for almost all areas of a mutation discovery project from the creation and prioritization of a large candidate gene list, to the selection, ordering, and managing of primer pairs, and even support for SSCP assay results. TrAPSS is a currently deployed and often used tool for several laboratories here at the University of Iowa in the College of Medicine. The system is composed of several Java applications, many web-based PHP tools, and a local MySQL database. Even the Java applications are available through a web browser due to Sun's Java Web Start. Director of the CLCG, Professor Terry A. Braun, heads the project along with Dr. Todd Scheetz and Prof. Thomas L. Casavant. Eight developers create and maintain the software: Bartley Brown , Steven Davis and Jason Grundstad; along with four graduate students, Hakeem Abdulkaway, Brian O'Leary, Michael Smith, and John Ritchison; and one undergraduate student, Matthew Kemp. The Usefulness of TrAPSSThe true usefulness of TrAPSS is that it is based upon a novel way to examine a large candidate list of genes. Rather than sequentially examining full genes, the scheme often followed in current projects, TrAPSS provides tools that offer the user the opportunity to screen certain small parts of several genes from the candidate list at once. The current method will be referred to as the serial method and the new idea will be called the parallel method. This parallel screening idea was envisioned by researchers here at the University including Dr. Edwin Stone and Prof. Thomas L. Casavant. Research by graduate student Steven Davis has demonstrated the advantage of the parallel screening method. Quick Overview of the Different Approaches to Mutation Screening
The Programs Integrated into TrAPSS
To learn more about TrAPSS, go to bioneos.com, a startup bioinformatics company that will be furthering development on TrAPSS. trapss1 |
|||||||||||||||||||||||