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Dive into the research topics where Bruce Parrello is active.

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Featured researches published by Bruce Parrello.


BMC Genomics | 2008

The RAST Server: Rapid Annotations using Subsystems Technology

Ramy K. Aziz; Daniela Bartels; Aaron A. Best; Matthew DeJongh; Terrence Disz; Robert Edwards; Kevin Formsma; Svetlana Gerdes; Elizabeth M. Glass; Michael Kubal; Folker Meyer; Gary J. Olsen; Robert Olson; Andrei L. Osterman; Ross Overbeek; Leslie K. McNeil; Daniel Paarmann; Tobias Paczian; Bruce Parrello; Gordon D. Pusch; Claudia I. Reich; Rick Stevens; Olga Vassieva; Veronika Vonstein; Andreas Wilke; Olga Zagnitko

BackgroundThe number of prokaryotic genome sequences becoming available is growing steadily and is growing faster than our ability to accurately annotate them.DescriptionWe describe a fully automated service for annotating bacterial and archaeal genomes. The service identifies protein-encoding, rRNA and tRNA genes, assigns functions to the genes, predicts which subsystems are represented in the genome, uses this information to reconstruct the metabolic network and makes the output easily downloadable for the user. In addition, the annotated genome can be browsed in an environment that supports comparative analysis with the annotated genomes maintained in the SEED environment.The service normally makes the annotated genome available within 12–24 hours of submission, but ultimately the quality of such a service will be judged in terms of accuracy, consistency, and completeness of the produced annotations. We summarize our attempts to address these issues and discuss plans for incrementally enhancing the service.ConclusionBy providing accurate, rapid annotation freely to the community we have created an important community resource. The service has now been utilized by over 120 external users annotating over 350 distinct genomes.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

The SEED and the Rapid Annotation of microbial genomes using Subsystems Technology (RAST)

Ross Overbeek; Robert Olson; Gordon D. Pusch; Gary J. Olsen; James J. Davis; Terry Disz; Robert Edwards; Svetlana Gerdes; Bruce Parrello; Maulik Shukla; Veronika Vonstein; Alice R. Wattam; Fangfang Xia; Rick Stevens

In 2004, the SEED (http://pubseed.theseed.org/) was created to provide consistent and accurate genome annotations across thousands of genomes and as a platform for discovering and developing de novo annotations. The SEED is a constantly updated integration of genomic data with a genome database, web front end, API and server scripts. It is used by many scientists for predicting gene functions and discovering new pathways. In addition to being a powerful database for bioinformatics research, the SEED also houses subsystems (collections of functionally related protein families) and their derived FIGfams (protein families), which represent the core of the RAST annotation engine (http://rast.nmpdr.org/). When a new genome is submitted to RAST, genes are called and their annotations are made by comparison to the FIGfam collection. If the genome is made public, it is then housed within the SEED and its proteins populate the FIGfam collection. This annotation cycle has proven to be a robust and scalable solution to the problem of annotating the exponentially increasing number of genomes. To date, >12 000 users worldwide have annotated >60 000 distinct genomes using RAST. Here we describe the interconnectedness of the SEED database and RAST, the RAST annotation pipeline and updates to both resources.


Scientific Reports | 2015

RASTtk: A modular and extensible implementation of the RAST algorithm for building custom annotation pipelines and annotating batches of genomes

Thomas Brettin; James J. Davis; Terry Disz; Robert Edwards; Svetlana Gerdes; Gary J. Olsen; Robert Olson; Ross Overbeek; Bruce Parrello; Gordon D. Pusch; Maulik Shukla; James Thomason; Rick Stevens; Veronika Vonstein; Alice R. Wattam; Fangfang Xia

The RAST (Rapid Annotation using Subsystem Technology) annotation engine was built in 2008 to annotate bacterial and archaeal genomes. It works by offering a standard software pipeline for identifying genomic features (i.e., protein-encoding genes and RNA) and annotating their functions. Recently, in order to make RAST a more useful research tool and to keep pace with advancements in bioinformatics, it has become desirable to build a version of RAST that is both customizable and extensible. In this paper, we describe the RAST tool kit (RASTtk), a modular version of RAST that enables researchers to build custom annotation pipelines. RASTtk offers a choice of software for identifying and annotating genomic features as well as the ability to add custom features to an annotation job. RASTtk also accommodates the batch submission of genomes and the ability to customize annotation protocols for batch submissions. This is the first major software restructuring of RAST since its inception.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2017

Improvements to PATRIC, the all-bacterial Bioinformatics Database and Analysis Resource Center

Alice R. Wattam; James J. Davis; Rida Assaf; Sébastien Boisvert; Thomas Brettin; Christopher Bun; Neal Conrad; Emily M. Dietrich; Terry Disz; Joseph L. Gabbard; Svetlana Gerdes; Christopher S. Henry; Ronald Kenyon; Dustin Machi; Chunhong Mao; Eric K. Nordberg; Gary J. Olsen; Daniel Murphy-Olson; Robert Olson; Ross Overbeek; Bruce Parrello; Gordon D. Pusch; Maulik Shukla; Veronika Vonstein; Andrew S. Warren; Fangfang Xia; Hyun Seung Yoo; Rick Stevens

The Pathosystems Resource Integration Center (PATRIC) is the bacterial Bioinformatics Resource Center (https://www.patricbrc.org). Recent changes to PATRIC include a redesign of the web interface and some new services that provide users with a platform that takes them from raw reads to an integrated analysis experience. The redesigned interface allows researchers direct access to tools and data, and the emphasis has changed to user-created genome-groups, with detailed summaries and views of the data that researchers have selected. Perhaps the biggest change has been the enhanced capability for researchers to analyze their private data and compare it to the available public data. Researchers can assemble their raw sequence reads and annotate the contigs using RASTtk. PATRIC also provides services for RNA-Seq, variation, model reconstruction and differential expression analysis, all delivered through an updated private workspace. Private data can be compared by ‘virtual integration’ to any of PATRICs public data. The number of genomes available for comparison in PATRIC has expanded to over 80 000, with a special emphasis on genomes with antimicrobial resistance data. PATRIC uses this data to improve both subsystem annotation and k-mer classification, and tags new genomes as having signatures that indicate susceptibility or resistance to specific antibiotics.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

The National Microbial Pathogen Database Resource (NMPDR): a genomics platform based on subsystem annotation

Leslie K. McNeil; Claudia I. Reich; Ramy K. Aziz; Daniela Bartels; Matthew Cohoon; Terry Disz; Robert Edwards; Svetlana Gerdes; Kaitlyn Hwang; Michael Kubal; Gohar Rem Margaryan; Folker Meyer; William Mihalo; Gary J. Olsen; Robert Olson; Andrei L. Osterman; Daniel Paarmann; Tobias Paczian; Bruce Parrello; Gordon D. Pusch; Dmitry A. Rodionov; Xinghua Shi; Olga Vassieva; Veronika Vonstein; Olga Zagnitko; Fangfang Xia; Jenifer Zinner; Ross Overbeek; Rick Stevens

The National Microbial Pathogen Data Resource (NMPDR) () is a National Institute of Allergy and Infections Disease (NIAID)-funded Bioinformatics Resource Center that supports research in selected Category B pathogens. NMPDR contains the complete genomes of ∼50 strains of pathogenic bacteria that are the focus of our curators, as well as >400 other genomes that provide a broad context for comparative analysis across the three phylogenetic Domains. NMPDR integrates complete, public genomes with expertly curated biological subsystems to provide the most consistent genome annotations. Subsystems are sets of functional roles related by a biologically meaningful organizing principle, which are built over large collections of genomes; they provide researchers with consistent functional assignments in a biologically structured context. Investigators can browse subsystems and reactions to develop accurate reconstructions of the metabolic networks of any sequenced organism. NMPDR provides a comprehensive bioinformatics platform, with tools and viewers for genome analysis. Results of precomputed gene clustering analyses can be retrieved in tabular or graphic format with one-click tools. NMPDR tools include Signature Genes, which finds the set of genes in common or that differentiates two groups of organisms. Essentiality data collated from genome-wide studies have been curated. Drug target identification and high-throughput, in silico, compound screening are in development.


PLOS ONE | 2012

SEED Servers: High-Performance Access to the SEED Genomes, Annotations, and Metabolic Models

Ramy K. Aziz; Scott Devoid; Terrence Disz; Robert Edwards; Christopher S. Henry; Gary J. Olsen; Robert Olson; Ross Overbeek; Bruce Parrello; Gordon D. Pusch; Rick Stevens; Veronika Vonstein; Fangfang Xia

The remarkable advance in sequencing technology and the rising interest in medical and environmental microbiology, biotechnology, and synthetic biology resulted in a deluge of published microbial genomes. Yet, genome annotation, comparison, and modeling remain a major bottleneck to the translation of sequence information into biological knowledge, hence computational analysis tools are continuously being developed for rapid genome annotation and interpretation. Among the earliest, most comprehensive resources for prokaryotic genome analysis, the SEED project, initiated in 2003 as an integration of genomic data and analysis tools, now contains >5,000 complete genomes, a constantly updated set of curated annotations embodied in a large and growing collection of encoded subsystems, a derived set of protein families, and hundreds of genome-scale metabolic models. Until recently, however, maintaining current copies of the SEED code and data at remote locations has been a pressing issue. To allow high-performance remote access to the SEED database, we developed the SEED Servers (http://www.theseed.org/servers): four network-based servers intended to expose the data in the underlying relational database, support basic annotation services, offer programmatic access to the capabilities of the RAST annotation server, and provide access to a growing collection of metabolic models that support flux balance analysis. The SEED servers offer open access to regularly updated data, the ability to annotate prokaryotic genomes, the ability to create metabolic reconstructions and detailed models of metabolism, and access to hundreds of existing metabolic models. This work offers and supports a framework upon which other groups can build independent research efforts. Large integrations of genomic data represent one of the major intellectual resources driving research in biology, and programmatic access to the SEED data will provide significant utility to a broad collection of potential users.


bioRxiv | 2016

The DOE Systems Biology Knowledgebase (KBase)

Adam P. Arkin; Rick Stevens; Robert W. Cottingham; Sergei Maslov; Christopher S. Henry; Paramvir Dehal; Doreen Ware; Fernando Perez; Nomi L. Harris; Shane Canon; Michael W Sneddon; Matthew L Henderson; William J Riehl; Dan Gunter; Dan Murphy-Olson; Stephen Chan; Roy T Kamimura; Thomas S Brettin; Folker Meyer; Dylan Chivian; David J. Weston; Elizabeth M. Glass; Brian H. Davison; Sunita Kumari; Benjamin H Allen; Jason K. Baumohl; Aaron A. Best; Ben Bowen; Steven E. Brenner; Christopher C Bun

The U.S. Department of Energy Systems Biology Knowledgebase (KBase) is an open-source software and data platform designed to meet the grand challenge of systems biology — predicting and designing biological function from the biomolecular (small scale) to the ecological (large scale). KBase is available for anyone to use, and enables researchers to collaboratively generate, test, compare, and share hypotheses about biological functions; perform large-scale analyses on scalable computing infrastructure; and combine experimental evidence and conclusions that lead to accurate models of plant and microbial physiology and community dynamics. The KBase platform has (1) extensible analytical capabilities that currently include genome assembly, annotation, ontology assignment, comparative genomics, transcriptomics, and metabolic modeling; (2) a web-browser-based user interface that supports building, sharing, and publishing reproducible and well-annotated analyses with integrated data; (3) access to extensive computational resources; and (4) a software development kit allowing the community to add functionality to the system.


Nature Biotechnology | 2018

KBase: The United States Department of Energy Systems Biology Knowledgebase

Adam P. Arkin; Robert W. Cottingham; Christopher S. Henry; Nomi L. Harris; Rick Stevens; Sergei Maslov; Paramvir Dehal; Doreen Ware; Fernando Perez; Shane Canon; Michael W Sneddon; Matthew L Henderson; William J Riehl; Dan Murphy-Olson; Stephen Chan; Roy T Kamimura; Sunita Kumari; Meghan M Drake; Thomas Brettin; Elizabeth M. Glass; Dylan Chivian; Dan Gunter; David J. Weston; Benjamin H Allen; Jason K. Baumohl; Aaron A. Best; Ben Bowen; Steven E. Brenner; Christopher C Bun; John-Marc Chandonia

Author(s): Arkin, Adam P; Cottingham, Robert W; Henry, Christopher S; Harris, Nomi L; Stevens, Rick L; Maslov, Sergei; Dehal, Paramvir; Ware, Doreen; Perez, Fernando; Canon, Shane; Sneddon, Michael W; Henderson, Matthew L; Riehl, William J; Murphy-Olson, Dan; Chan, Stephen Y; Kamimura, Roy T; Kumari, Sunita; Drake, Meghan M; Brettin, Thomas S; Glass, Elizabeth M; Chivian, Dylan; Gunter, Dan; Weston, David J; Allen, Benjamin H; Baumohl, Jason; Best, Aaron A; Bowen, Ben; Brenner, Steven E; Bun, Christopher C; Chandonia, John-Marc; Chia, Jer-Ming; Colasanti, Ric; Conrad, Neal; Davis, James J; Davison, Brian H; DeJongh, Matthew; Devoid, Scott; Dietrich, Emily; Dubchak, Inna; Edirisinghe, Janaka N; Fang, Gang; Faria, Jose P; Frybarger, Paul M; Gerlach, Wolfgang; Gerstein, Mark; Greiner, Annette; Gurtowski, James; Haun, Holly L; He, Fei; Jain, Rashmi; Joachimiak, Marcin P; Keegan, Kevin P; Kondo, Shinnosuke; Kumar, Vivek; Land, Miriam L; Meyer, Folker; Mills, Marissa; Novichkov, Pavel S; Oh, Taeyun; Olsen, Gary J; Olson, Robert; Parrello, Bruce; Pasternak, Shiran; Pearson, Erik; Poon, Sarah S; Price, Gavin A; Ramakrishnan, Srividya; Ranjan, Priya; Ronald, Pamela C; Schatz, Michael C; Seaver, Samuel MD; Shukla, Maulik; Sutormin, Roman A; Syed, Mustafa H; Thomason, James; Tintle, Nathan L; Wang, Daifeng; Xia, Fangfang; Yoo, Hyunseung; Yoo, Shinjae; Yu, Dantong


Briefings in Bioinformatics | 2017

PATRIC as a unique resource for studying antimicrobial resistance

Dionysios A. Antonopoulos; Rida Assaf; Ramy K. Aziz; Thomas Brettin; Christopher Bun; Neal Conrad; James J. Davis; Emily M. Dietrich; Terry Disz; Svetlana Gerdes; Ronald W. Kenyon; Dustin Machi; Chunhong Mao; Daniel Murphy-Olson; Eric K. Nordberg; Gary J. Olsen; Robert J. Olson; Ross Overbeek; Bruce Parrello; Gordon D. Pusch; John Santerre; Maulik Shukla; Rick Stevens; Margo VanOeffelen; Veronika Vonstein; Andrew S. Warren; Alice R. Wattam; Fangfang Xia; Hyunseung Yoo

Abstract The Pathosystems Resource Integration Center (PATRIC, www.patricbrc.org) is designed to provide researchers with the tools and services that they need to perform genomic and other ‘omic’ data analyses. In response to mounting concern over antimicrobial resistance (AMR), the PATRIC team has been developing new tools that help researchers understand AMR and its genetic determinants. To support comparative analyses, we have added AMR phenotype data to over 15 000 genomes in the PATRIC database, often assembling genomes from reads in public archives and collecting their associated AMR panel data from the literature to augment the collection. We have also been using this collection of AMR metadata to build machine learning-based classifiers that can predict the AMR phenotypes and the genomic regions associated with resistance for genomes being submitted to the annotation service. Likewise, we have undertaken a large AMR protein annotation effort by manually curating data from the literature and public repositories. This collection of 7370 AMR reference proteins, which contains many protein annotations (functional roles) that are unique to PATRIC and RAST, has been manually curated so that it projects stably across genomes. The collection currently projects to 1 610 744 proteins in the PATRIC database. Finally, the PATRIC Web site has been expanded to enable AMR-based custom page views so that researchers can easily explore AMR data and design experiments based on whole genomes or individual genes.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016

Computing and Applying Atomic Regulons to Understand Gene Expression and Regulation

José P. Faria; James J. Davis; Janaka N. Edirisinghe; Ronald C. Taylor; Pamela Weisenhorn; Robert Olson; Rick Stevens; Miguel Rocha; Isabel Rocha; Aaron A. Best; Matthew DeJongh; Nathan L. Tintle; Bruce Parrello; Ross Overbeek; Christopher S. Henry

Understanding gene function and regulation is essential for the interpretation, prediction, and ultimate design of cell responses to changes in the environment. An important step toward meeting the challenge of understanding gene function and regulation is the identification of sets of genes that are always co-expressed. These gene sets, Atomic Regulons (ARs), represent fundamental units of function within a cell and could be used to associate genes of unknown function with cellular processes and to enable rational genetic engineering of cellular systems. Here, we describe an approach for inferring ARs that leverages large-scale expression data sets, gene context, and functional relationships among genes. We computed ARs for Escherichia coli based on 907 gene expression experiments and compared our results with gene clusters produced by two prevalent data-driven methods: Hierarchical clustering and k-means clustering. We compared ARs and purely data-driven gene clusters to the curated set of regulatory interactions for E. coli found in RegulonDB, showing that ARs are more consistent with gold standard regulons than are data-driven gene clusters. We further examined the consistency of ARs and data-driven gene clusters in the context of gene interactions predicted by Context Likelihood of Relatedness (CLR) analysis, finding that the ARs show better agreement with CLR predicted interactions. We determined the impact of increasing amounts of expression data on AR construction and find that while more data improve ARs, it is not necessary to use the full set of gene expression experiments available for E. coli to produce high quality ARs. In order to explore the conservation of co-regulated gene sets across different organisms, we computed ARs for Shewanella oneidensis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Thermus thermophilus, and Staphylococcus aureus, each of which represents increasing degrees of phylogenetic distance from E. coli. Comparison of the organism-specific ARs showed that the consistency of AR gene membership correlates with phylogenetic distance, but there is clear variability in the regulatory networks of closely related organisms. As large scale expression data sets become increasingly common for model and non-model organisms, comparative analyses of atomic regulons will provide valuable insights into fundamental regulatory modules used across the bacterial domain.

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Rick Stevens

Argonne National Laboratory

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Ross Overbeek

Argonne National Laboratory

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Gordon D. Pusch

Argonne National Laboratory

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Veronika Vonstein

Argonne National Laboratory

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Svetlana Gerdes

Argonne National Laboratory

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Robert Edwards

San Diego State University

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