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Featured researches published by Christoph Steinbeck.


Journal of Chemical Information and Computer Sciences | 2003

The Chemistry Development Kit (CDK): An open-source Java library for chemo- and bioinformatics

Christoph Steinbeck; Yongquan Han; Stefan Kuhn; Oliver Horlacher; Edgar Luttmann; Egon Willighagen

The Chemistry Development Kit (CDK) is a freely available open-source Java library for Structural Chemo- and Bioinformatics. Its architecture and capabilities as well as the development as an open-source project by a team of international collaborators from academic and industrial institutions is described. The CDK provides methods for many common tasks in molecular informatics, including 2D and 3D rendering of chemical structures, I/O routines, SMILES parsing and generation, ring searches, isomorphism checking, structure diagram generation, etc. Application scenarios as well as access information for interested users and potential contributors are given.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

The ChEBI reference database and ontology for biologically relevant chemistry: enhancements for 2013

Janna Hastings; Paula de Matos; Adriano Dekker; Marcus Ennis; Bhavana Harsha; Namrata Kale; Venkatesh Muthukrishnan; Gareth Owen; Steve Turner; Mark A. Williams; Christoph Steinbeck

ChEBI (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/chebi) is a database and ontology of chemical entities of biological interest. Over the past few years, ChEBI has continued to grow steadily in content, and has added several new features. In addition to incorporating all user-requested compounds, our annotation efforts have emphasized immunology, natural products and metabolites in many species. All database entries are now ‘is_a’ classified within the ontology, meaning that all of the chemicals are available to semantic reasoning tools that harness the classification hierarchy. We have completely aligned the ontology with the Open Biomedical Ontologies (OBO) Foundry-recommended upper level Basic Formal Ontology. Furthermore, we have aligned our chemical classification with the classification of chemical-involving processes in the Gene Ontology (GO), and as a result of this effort, the majority of chemical-involving processes in GO are now defined in terms of the ChEBI entities that participate in them. This effort necessitated incorporating many additional biologically relevant compounds. We have incorporated additional data types including reference citations, and the species and component for metabolites. Finally, our website and web services have had several enhancements, most notably the provision of a dynamic new interactive graph-based ontology visualization.


Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2006

Recent developments of the chemistry development kit (CDK) - : An open-source java library for chemo- and bioinformatics

Christoph Steinbeck; Christian Hoppe; Stefan Kuhn; Matteo Floris; Rajarshi Guha; Egon Willighagen

The Chemistry Development Kit (CDK) provides methods for common tasks in molecular informatics, including 2D and 3D rendering of chemical structures, I/O routines, SMILES parsing and generation, ring searches, isomorphism checking, structure diagram generation, etc. Implemented in Java, it is used both for server-side computational services, possibly equipped with a web interface, as well as for applications and client-side applets. This article introduces the CDKs new QSAR capabilities and the recently introduced interface to statistical software.


Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2006

The Blue Obelisk-interoperability in chemical informatics.

Rajarshi Guha; Michael T. Howard; Geoffrey R. Hutchison; Peter Murray-Rust; Henry S. Rzepa; Christoph Steinbeck; Jörg K. Wegner; Egon Willighagen

The Blue Obelisk Movement (http://www.blueobelisk.org/) is the name used by a diverse Internet group promoting reusable chemistry via open source software development, consistent and complimentary chemoinformatics research, open data, and open standards. We outline recent examples of cooperation in the Blue Obelisk group:  a shared dictionary of algorithms and implementations in chemoinformatics algorithms drawing from our various software projects; a shared repository of chemoinformatics data including elemental properties, atomic radii, isotopes, atom typing rules, and so forth; and Web services for the platform-independent use of chemoinformatics programs.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

MetaboLights—an open-access general-purpose repository for metabolomics studies and associated meta-data

Kenneth Haug; Reza M. Salek; Pablo Conesa; Janna Hastings; Paula de Matos; Mark Rijnbeek; Tejasvi Mahendraker; Mark A. Williams; Steffen Neumann; Philippe Rocca-Serra; Eamonn Maguire; Alejandra Gonzalez-Beltran; Susanna-Assunta Sansone; Julian L. Griffin; Christoph Steinbeck

MetaboLights (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/metabolights) is the first general-purpose, open-access repository for metabolomics studies, their raw experimental data and associated metadata, maintained by one of the major open-access data providers in molecular biology. Metabolomic profiling is an important tool for research into biological functioning and into the systemic perturbations caused by diseases, diet and the environment. The effectiveness of such methods depends on the availability of public open data across a broad range of experimental methods and conditions. The MetaboLights repository, powered by the open source ISA framework, is cross-species and cross-technique. It will cover metabolite structures and their reference spectra as well as their biological roles, locations, concentrations and raw data from metabolic experiments. Studies automatically receive a stable unique accession number that can be used as a publication reference (e.g. MTBLS1). At present, the repository includes 15 submitted studies, encompassing 93 protocols for 714 assays, and span over 8 different species including human, Caenorhabditis elegans, Mus musculus and Arabidopsis thaliana. Eight hundred twenty-seven of the metabolites identified in these studies have been mapped to ChEBI. These studies cover a variety of techniques, including NMR spectroscopy and mass spectrometry.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

Chemical Entities of Biological Interest: an update

Paula de Matos; Rafael Alcántara; Adriano Dekker; Marcus Ennis; Janna Hastings; Kenneth Haug; Inmaculada Spiteri; Steve Turner; Christoph Steinbeck

Chemical Entities of Biological Interest (ChEBI) is a freely available dictionary of molecular entities focused on ‘small’ chemical compounds. The molecular entities in question are either natural products or synthetic products used to intervene in the processes of living organisms. Genome-encoded macromolecules (nucleic acids, proteins and peptides derived from proteins by cleavage) are not as a rule included in ChEBI. In addition to molecular entities, ChEBI contains groups (parts of molecular entities) and classes of entities. ChEBI includes an ontological classification, whereby the relationships between molecular entities or classes of entities and their parents and/or children are specified. ChEBI is available online at http://www.ebi.ac.uk/chebi/. This article reports on new features in ChEBI since the last NAR report in 2007, including substructure and similarity searching, a submission tool for authoring of ChEBI datasets by the community and a 30-fold increase in the number of chemical structures stored in ChEBI.


BMC Bioinformatics | 2007

Bioclipse: an open source workbench for chemo- and bioinformatics

Ola Spjuth; Tobias Helmus; Egon Willighagen; Stefan Kuhn; Martin Eklund; Johannes Wagener; Peter Murray-Rust; Christoph Steinbeck; Jarl E. S. Wikberg

BackgroundThere is a need for software applications that provide users with a complete and extensible toolkit for chemo- and bioinformatics accessible from a single workbench. Commercial packages are expensive and closed source, hence they do not allow end users to modify algorithms and add custom functionality. Existing open source projects are more focused on providing a framework for integrating existing, separately installed bioinformatics packages, rather than providing user-friendly interfaces. No open source chemoinformatics workbench has previously been published, and no sucessful attempts have been made to integrate chemo- and bioinformatics into a single framework.ResultsBioclipse is an advanced workbench for resources in chemo- and bioinformatics, such as molecules, proteins, sequences, spectra, and scripts. It provides 2D-editing, 3D-visualization, file format conversion, calculation of chemical properties, and much more; all fully integrated into a user-friendly desktop application. Editing supports standard functions such as cut and paste, drag and drop, and undo/redo. Bioclipse is written in Java and based on the Eclipse Rich Client Platform with a state-of-the-art plugin architecture. This gives Bioclipse an advantage over other systems as it can easily be extended with functionality in any desired direction.ConclusionBioclipse is a powerful workbench for bio- and chemoinformatics as well as an advanced integration platform. The rich functionality, intuitive user interface, and powerful plugin architecture make Bioclipse the most advanced and user-friendly open source workbench for chemo- and bioinformatics. Bioclipse is released under Eclipse Public License (EPL), an open source license which sets no constraints on external plugin licensing; it is totally open for both open source plugins as well as commercial ones. Bioclipse is freely available at http://www.bioclipse.net.


GigaScience | 2013

The role of reporting standards for metabolite annotation and identification in metabolomic studies

Reza M. Salek; Christoph Steinbeck; Mark R. Viant; Royston Goodacre; Warwick B. Dunn

The application of reporting standards in metabolomics allow data from different laboratories to be shared, integrated and interpreted. Although minimum reporting standards related to metabolite identification were published in 2007, it is clear that significant efforts are required to ensure their continuous update and appropriate use by the metabolomics community. These include their use in metabolomics data submission (e.g., MetaboLights) and as a requirement for publication in peer-reviewed journals (e.g., Metabolomics). The Data Standards and Metabolite Identification Task Groups of the international Metabolomics Society are actively working to develop and promote these standards and educate the community on their use.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

ChEBI in 2016: Improved services and an expanding collection of metabolites

Janna Hastings; Gareth Owen; Adriano Dekker; Marcus Ennis; Namrata Kale; Venkatesh Muthukrishnan; Steve Turner; Neil Swainston; Pedro Mendes; Christoph Steinbeck

ChEBI is a database and ontology containing information about chemical entities of biological interest. It currently includes over 46 000 entries, each of which is classified within the ontology and assigned multiple annotations including (where relevant) a chemical structure, database cross-references, synonyms and literature citations. All content is freely available and can be accessed online at http://www.ebi.ac.uk/chebi. In this update paper, we describe recent improvements and additions to the ChEBI offering. We have substantially extended our collection of endogenous metabolites for several organisms including human, mouse, Escherichia coli and yeast. Our front-end has also been reworked and updated, improving the user experience, removing our dependency on Java applets in favour of embedded JavaScript components and moving from a monthly release update to a ‘live’ website. Programmatic access has been improved by the introduction of a library, libChEBI, in Java, Python and Matlab. Furthermore, we have added two new tools, namely an analysis tool, BiNChE, and a query tool for the ontology, OntoQuery.


Nature Reviews Drug Discovery | 2011

Minimum information about a bioactive entity (MIABE)

Sandra Orchard; Bissan Al-Lazikani; Steve Bryant; Dominic Clark; Elizabeth Calder; Ian Dix; Ola Engkvist; Mark J. Forster; Anna Gaulton; Michael Gilson; Robert Glen; Martin Grigorov; Kim E. Hammond-Kosack; Lee Harland; Andrew Hopkins; Christopher Larminie; Nick Lynch; Romeena K. Mann; Peter Murray-Rust; Elena Lo Piparo; Christopher Southan; Christoph Steinbeck; David Wishart; Henning Hermjakob; John P. Overington; Janet M. Thornton

Bioactive molecules such as drugs, pesticides and food additives are produced in large numbers by many commercial and academic groups around the world. Enormous quantities of data are generated on the biological properties and quality of these molecules. Access to such data — both on licensed and commercially available compounds, and also on those that fail during development — is crucial for understanding how improved molecules could be developed. For example, computational analysis of aggregated data on molecules that are investigated in drug discovery programmes has led to a greater understanding of the properties of successful drugs. However, the information required to perform these analyses is rarely published, and when it is made available it is often missing crucial data or is in a format that is inappropriate for efficient data-mining. Here, we propose a solution: the definition of reporting guidelines for bioactive entities — the Minimum Information About a Bioactive Entity (MIABE) — which has been developed by representatives of pharmaceutical companies, data resource providers and academic groups.

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Janna Hastings

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Reza M. Salek

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Kenneth Haug

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Paula de Matos

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Pablo Moreno

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Steve Turner

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Gareth Owen

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Adriano Dekker

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Marcus Ennis

Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics

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