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Kinomics toolbox—A web platform for analysis and viewing of kinomic peptide array data

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  • Alex M Dussaq
  • Timothy Kennell Jr.
  • Nicholas J Eustace
  • Joshua C Anderson
  • Jonas S Almeida
  • Christopher D Willey

Abstract

Kinomics is an emerging field of science that involves the study of global kinase activity. As kinases are essential players in virtually all cellular activities, kinomic testing can directly examine protein function, distinguishing kinomics from more remote, upstream components of the central dogma, such as genomics and transcriptomics. While there exist several different approaches for kinomic research, peptide microarrays are the most widely used and involve kinase activity assessment through measurement of phosphorylation of peptide substrates on the array. Unfortunately, bioinformatic tools for analyzing kinomic data are quite limited necessitating the development of accessible open access software in order to facilitate standardization and dissemination of kinomic data for scientific use. Here, we examine and present tools for data analysis for the popular PamChip® (PamGene International) kinomic peptide microarray. As a result, we propose (1) a procedural optimization of kinetic curve data capture, (2) new methods for background normalization, (3) guidelines for the detection of outliers during parameterization, and (4) a standardized data model to store array data at various analytical points. In order to utilize the new data model, we developed a series of tools to implement the new methods and to visualize the various data models. In the interest of accessibility, we developed this new toolbox as a series of JavaScript procedures that can be utilized as either server side resources (easily packaged as web services) or as client side scripts (web applications running in the browser). The aggregation of these tools within a Kinomics Toolbox provides an extensible web based analytic platform that researchers can engage directly and web programmers can extend. As a proof of concept, we developed three analytical tools, a technical reproducibility visualizer, an ANOVA based detector of differentially phosphorylated peptides, and a heatmap display with hierarchical clustering.

Suggested Citation

  • Alex M Dussaq & Timothy Kennell Jr. & Nicholas J Eustace & Joshua C Anderson & Jonas S Almeida & Christopher D Willey, 2018. "Kinomics toolbox—A web platform for analysis and viewing of kinomic peptide array data," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 13(8), pages 1-18, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0202139
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0202139
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Brett Trost & Jason Kindrachuk & Pekka Määttänen & Scott Napper & Anthony Kusalik, 2013. "PIIKA 2: An Expanded, Web-Based Platform for Analysis of Kinome Microarray Data," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 8(11), pages 1-12, November.
    2. Monya Baker & Elie Dolgin, 2017. "Cancer reproducibility project releases first results," Nature, Nature, vol. 541(7637), pages 269-270, January.
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    Cited by:

    1. Erica A K DePasquale & Khaled Alganem & Eduard Bentea & Nawshaba Nawreen & Jennifer L McGuire & Tushar Tomar & Faris Naji & Riet Hilhorst & Jaroslaw Meller & Robert E McCullumsmith, 2021. "KRSA: An R package and R Shiny web application for an end-to-end upstream kinase analysis of kinome array data," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 16(12), pages 1-16, December.

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