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Dive into the research topics where Ioannis Xenarios is active.

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Featured researches published by Ioannis Xenarios.


Nature Biotechnology | 2014

ProteomeXchange provides globally coordinated proteomics data submission and dissemination

Juan Antonio Vizcaíno; Eric W. Deutsch; Rui Wang; Attila Csordas; Florian Reisinger; Daniel Ríos; Jose Ángel Dianes; Zhi-Jun Sun; Terry Farrah; Nuno Bandeira; Pierre-Alain Binz; Ioannis Xenarios; Martin Eisenacher; Gerhard Mayer; Laurent Gatto; Alex Campos; Robert J. Chalkley; Hans-Joachim Kraus; Juan Pablo Albar; Salvador Martínez-Bartolomé; Rolf Apweiler; Gilbert S. Omenn; Lennart Martens; Andrew R. Jones; Henning Hermjakob

5. Tools available and ways to submit data to PX ............................................................. 11 5.1. MS/MS data submissions to PRIDE .................................................................................... 11 5.1.1. Creation of supported files for “Complete” submissions .................................................. 11 5.1.1.1. PRIDE XML .................................................................................................................................. 11 5.1.1.2. mzIdentML ................................................................................................................................. 13 5.1.2. Checking the files before submission (initial quality assessment) ..................................... 14 5.1.3. File submission to PRIDE: the PX submission tool ............................................................. 15 5.1.3.1. General Information ................................................................................................................... 15 5.1.3.2. Functionality, Design and Implementation Details .................................................................... 15 5.1.3.3. New open source libraries made available with PX submission tool ......................................... 18 5.1.3.4. PX Submission Tool Java Web Start ............................................................................................ 18 5.1.4. File submission to PRIDE: Command line support using Aspera ........................................ 19 5.1.5. Examples of Partial submissions to PRIDE ......................................................................... 19 5.2. SRM data submissions via PASSEL ..................................................................................... 20


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

The InterPro protein families database: the classification resource after 15 years

Alex L. Mitchell; Hsin-Yu Chang; Louise Daugherty; Matthew Fraser; Sarah Hunter; Rodrigo Lopez; Craig McAnulla; Conor McMenamin; Gift Nuka; Sebastien Pesseat; Amaia Sangrador-Vegas; Maxim Scheremetjew; Claudia Rato; Siew-Yit Yong; Alex Bateman; Marco Punta; Teresa K. Attwood; Christian J. A. Sigrist; Nicole Redaschi; Catherine Rivoire; Ioannis Xenarios; Daniel Kahn; Dominique Guyot; Peer Bork; Ivica Letunic; Julian Gough; Matt E. Oates; Daniel H. Haft; Hongzhan Huang; Darren A. Natale

The InterPro database (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/interpro/) is a freely available resource that can be used to classify sequences into protein families and to predict the presence of important domains and sites. Central to the InterPro database are predictive models, known as signatures, from a range of different protein family databases that have different biological focuses and use different methodological approaches to classify protein families and domains. InterPro integrates these signatures, capitalizing on the respective strengths of the individual databases, to produce a powerful protein classification resource. Here, we report on the status of InterPro as it enters its 15th year of operation, and give an overview of new developments with the database and its associated Web interfaces and software. In particular, the new domain architecture search tool is described and the process of mapping of Gene Ontology terms to InterPro is outlined. We also discuss the challenges faced by the resource given the explosive growth in sequence data in recent years. InterPro (version 48.0) contains 36 766 member database signatures integrated into 26 238 InterPro entries, an increase of over 3993 entries (5081 signatures), since 2012.


Nature | 2000

Protein function in the post-genomic era

David Eisenberg; Edward M. Marcotte; Ioannis Xenarios; Todd O. Yeates

Faced with the avalanche of genomic sequences and data on messenger RNA expression, biological scientists are confronting a frightening prospect: piles of information but only flakes of knowledge. How can the thousands of sequences being determined and deposited, and the thousands of expression profiles being generated by the new array methods, be synthesized into useful knowledge? What form will this knowledge take? These are questions being addressed by scientists in the field known as ‘functional genomics’.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2002

Protein Interactions Two Methods for Assessment of the Reliability of High Throughput Observations

Charlotte M. Deane; Lukasz Salwinski; Ioannis Xenarios; David Eisenberg

High throughput methods for detecting protein interactions require assessment of their accuracy. We present two forms of computational assessment. The first method is the expression profile reliability (EPR) index. The EPR index estimates the biologically relevant fraction of protein interactions detected in a high throughput screen. It does so by comparing the RNA expression profiles for the proteins whose interactions are found in the screen with expression profiles for known interacting and non-interacting pairs of proteins. The second form of assessment is the paralogous verification method (PVM). This method judges an interaction likely if the putatively interacting pair has paralogs that also interact. In contrast to the EPR index, which evaluates datasets of interactions, PVM scores individual interactions. On a test set, PVM identifies correctly 40% of true interactions with a false positive rate of ∼1%. EPR and PVM were applied to the Database of Interacting Proteins (DIP), a large and diverse collection of protein-protein interactions that contains over 8000 Saccharomyces cerevisiae pairwise protein interactions. Using these two methods, we estimate that ∼50% of them are reliable, and with the aid of PVM we identify confidently 3003 of them. Web servers for both the PVM and EPR methods are available on the DIP website (dip.doe-mbi.ucla.edu/Services.cgi).


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

ExPASy: SIB bioinformatics resource portal

Panu Artimo; Manohar Jonnalagedda; Konstantin Arnold; Delphine Baratin; Gábor Csárdi; Edouard de Castro; Séverine Duvaud; Volker Flegel; Arnaud Fortier; Elisabeth Gasteiger; Aurélien Grosdidier; Céline Hernandez; Vassilios Ioannidis; Dmitry Kuznetsov; Robin Liechti; Sébastien Moretti; Khaled Mostaguir; Nicole Redaschi; Grégoire Rossier; Ioannis Xenarios; Heinz Stockinger

ExPASy (http://www.expasy.org) has worldwide reputation as one of the main bioinformatics resources for proteomics. It has now evolved, becoming an extensible and integrative portal accessing many scientific resources, databases and software tools in different areas of life sciences. Scientists can henceforth access seamlessly a wide range of resources in many different domains, such as proteomics, genomics, phylogeny/evolution, systems biology, population genetics, transcriptomics, etc. The individual resources (databases, web-based and downloadable software tools) are hosted in a ‘decentralized’ way by different groups of the SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics and partner institutions. Specifically, a single web portal provides a common entry point to a wide range of resources developed and operated by different SIB groups and external institutions. The portal features a search function across ‘selected’ resources. Additionally, the availability and usage of resources are monitored. The portal is aimed for both expert users and people who are not familiar with a specific domain in life sciences. The new web interface provides, in particular, visual guidance for newcomers to ExPASy.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

New and continuing developments at PROSITE

Christian J. A. Sigrist; Edouard de Castro; Lorenzo Cerutti; Béatrice A. Cuche; Nicolas Hulo; Alan Bridge; Lydie Bougueleret; Ioannis Xenarios

PROSITE (http://prosite.expasy.org/) consists of documentation entries describing protein domains, families and functional sites, as well as associated patterns and profiles to identify them. It is complemented by ProRule a collection of rules, which increases the discriminatory power of these profiles and patterns by providing additional information about functionally and/or structurally critical amino acids. PROSITE signatures, together with ProRule, are used for the annotation of domains and features of UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot entries. Here, we describe recent developments that allow users to perform whole-proteome annotation as well as a number of filtering options that can be combined to perform powerful targeted searches for biological discovery. The latest version of PROSITE (release 20.85, of 30 August 2012) contains 1308 patterns, 1039 profiles and 1041 ProRules.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2011

T-Coffee: a web server for the multiple sequence alignment of protein and RNA sequences using structural information and homology extension

Paolo Di Tommaso; Sébastien Moretti; Ioannis Xenarios; Miquel Orobitg; Alberto Montanyola; Jia-Ming Chang; Jean-François Taly; Cedric Notredame

This article introduces a new interface for T-Coffee, a consistency-based multiple sequence alignment program. This interface provides an easy and intuitive access to the most popular functionality of the package. These include the default T-Coffee mode for protein and nucleic acid sequences, the M-Coffee mode that allows combining the output of any other aligners, and template-based modes of T-Coffee that deliver high accuracy alignments while using structural or homology derived templates. These three available template modes are Expresso for the alignment of protein with a known 3D-Structure, R-Coffee to align RNA sequences with conserved secondary structures and PSI-Coffee to accurately align distantly related sequences using homology extension. The new server benefits from recent improvements of the T-Coffee algorithm and can align up to 150 sequences as long as 10 000 residues and is available from both http://www.tcoffee.org and its main mirror http://tcoffee.crg.cat.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2017

InterPro in 2017—beyond protein family and domain annotations

Robert D. Finn; Teresa K. Attwood; Patricia C. Babbitt; Alex Bateman; Peer Bork; Alan Bridge; Hsin Yu Chang; Zsuzsanna Dosztányi; Sara El-Gebali; Matthew Fraser; Julian Gough; David R Haft; Gemma L. Holliday; Hongzhan Huang; Xiaosong Huang; Ivica Letunic; Rodrigo Lopez; Shennan Lu; Huaiyu Mi; Jaina Mistry; Darren A. Natale; Marco Necci; Gift Nuka; Christine A. Orengo; Youngmi Park; Sebastien Pesseat; Damiano Piovesan; Simon Potter; Neil D. Rawlings; Nicole Redaschi

InterPro (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/interpro/) is a freely available database used to classify protein sequences into families and to predict the presence of important domains and sites. InterProScan is the underlying software that allows both protein and nucleic acid sequences to be searched against InterPros predictive models, which are provided by its member databases. Here, we report recent developments with InterPro and its associated software, including the addition of two new databases (SFLD and CDD), and the functionality to include residue-level annotation and prediction of intrinsic disorder. These developments enrich the annotations provided by InterPro, increase the overall number of residues annotated and allow more specific functional inferences.


Immunity | 1997

IL-4 Rapidly Produced by Vβ4 Vα8 CD4+ T Cells Instructs Th2 Development and Susceptibility to Leishmania major in BALB/c Mice

Pascal Launois; Ivan Maillard; Sabine Pingel; Kristin G. Swihart; Ioannis Xenarios; Hans Acha-Orbea; Heidi Diggelmann; Richard M. Locksley; H. Robson MacDonald; Jacques A. Louis

BALB/c mice develop aberrant T helper 2 (Th2) responses and suffer progressive disease after infection with Leishmania major. These outcomes depend on the production of interleukin-4 (IL-4) early after infection. Here we demonstrate that the burst of IL-4 mRNA, peaking in draining lymph nodes of BALB/c mice 16 hr after infection, occurs within CD4+ T cells that express V beta 4 V alpha 8 T cell receptors. In contrast to control and V beta 6-deficient BALB/c mice, V beta 4-deficient BALB/c mice were resistant to infection, demonstrating the role of these cells in Th2 development. The early IL-4 response was absent in these mice, and T helper 1 responses occurred following infection. Recombinant LACK antigen from L. major induced comparable IL-4 production in V beta 4 V alpha 8 CD4+ cells. Thus, the IL-4 required for Th2 development and susceptibility to L. major is produced by a restricted population of V beta 4 V alpha 8 CD4+ T cells after cognate interaction with a single antigen from this complex organism.


Nature Medicine | 2001

Complement facilitates early prion pathogenesis

Michael A. Klein; Pascal S. Kaeser; Petra Schwarz; Heiko Weyd; Ioannis Xenarios; Rolf M. Zinkernagel; Michael C. Carroll; J. Sjef Verbeek; Marina Botto; Mark Walport; Hector Molina; Ulrich Kalinke; Hans Acha-Orbea; Adriano Aguzzi

New-variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease and scrapie are typically initiated by extracerebral exposure to the causative agent, and exhibit early prion replication in lymphoid organs. In mouse scrapie, depletion of B-lymphocytes prevents neuropathogenesis after intraperitoneal inoculation, probably due to impaired lymphotoxin-dependent maturation of follicular dendritic cells (FDCs), which are a major extracerebral prion reservoir. FDCs trap immune complexes with Fc-γ receptors and C3d/C4b-opsonized antigens with CD21/CD35 complement receptors. We examined whether these mechanisms participate in peripheral prion pathogenesis. Depletion of circulating immunoglobulins or of individual Fc-γ receptors had no effect on scrapie pathogenesis if B-cell maturation was unaffected. However, mice deficient in C3, C1q, Bf/C2, combinations thereof or complement receptors were partially or fully protected against spongiform encephalopathy upon intraperitoneal exposure to limiting amounts of prions. Splenic accumulation of prion infectivity and PrPSc was delayed, indicating that activation of specific complement components is involved in the initial trapping of prions in lymphoreticular organs early after infection.

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Robin Liechti

Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics

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Alan Bridge

Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics

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Mark Ibberson

Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics

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Nicolas Guex

Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics

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Sylvain Poux

Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics

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Christian Iseli

Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics

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Marco Pagni

Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics

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Nicole Redaschi

Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics

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