Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Issaku Yamada is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Issaku Yamada.


Journal of Biomedical Semantics | 2014

BioHackathon series in 2011 and 2012: penetration of ontology and linked data in life science domains

Toshiaki Katayama; Mark D. Wilkinson; Kiyoko F. Aoki-Kinoshita; Shuichi Kawashima; Yasunori Yamamoto; Atsuko Yamaguchi; Shinobu Okamoto; Shin Kawano; Jin Dong Kim; Yue Wang; Hongyan Wu; Yoshinobu Kano; Hiromasa Ono; Hidemasa Bono; Simon Kocbek; Jan Aerts; Yukie Akune; Erick Antezana; Kazuharu Arakawa; Bruno Aranda; Joachim Baran; Jerven T. Bolleman; Raoul J. P. Bonnal; Pier Luigi Buttigieg; Matthew Campbell; Yi An Chen; Hirokazu Chiba; Peter J. A. Cock; K. Bretonnel Cohen; Alexandru Constantin

The application of semantic technologies to the integration of biological data and the interoperability of bioinformatics analysis and visualization tools has been the common theme of a series of annual BioHackathons hosted in Japan for the past five years. Here we provide a review of the activities and outcomes from the BioHackathons held in 2011 in Kyoto and 2012 in Toyama. In order to efficiently implement semantic technologies in the life sciences, participants formed various sub-groups and worked on the following topics: Resource Description Framework (RDF) models for specific domains, text mining of the literature, ontology development, essential metadata for biological databases, platforms to enable efficient Semantic Web technology development and interoperability, and the development of applications for Semantic Web data. In this review, we briefly introduce the themes covered by these sub-groups. The observations made, conclusions drawn, and software development projects that emerged from these activities are discussed.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

GlyTouCan 1.0 – The international glycan structure repository

Kiyoko F. Aoki-Kinoshita; Sanjay Agravat; Nobuyuki P. Aoki; Sena Arpinar; Richard D. Cummings; Akihiro Fujita; Noriaki Fujita; Gerald Hart; Stuart M. Haslam; Toshisuke Kawasaki; Masaaki Matsubara; Kelley W. Moreman; Shujiro Okuda; Michael Pierce; René Ranzinger; Toshihide Shikanai; Daisuke Shinmachi; Elena Solovieva; Yoshinori Suzuki; Shinichiro Tsuchiya; Issaku Yamada; William S. York; Joseph Zaia; Hisashi Narimatsu

Glycans are known as the third major class of biopolymers, next to DNA and proteins. They cover the surfaces of many cells, serving as the ‘face’ of cells, whereby other biomolecules and viruses interact. The structure of glycans, however, differs greatly from DNA and proteins in that they are branched, as opposed to linear sequences of amino acids or nucleotides. Therefore, the storage of glycan information in databases, let alone their curation, has been a difficult problem. This has caused many duplicated efforts when integration is attempted between different databases, making an international repository for glycan structures, where unique accession numbers are assigned to every identified glycan structure, necessary. As such, an international team of developers and glycobiologists have collaborated to develop this repository, called GlyTouCan and is available at http://glytoucan.org/, to provide a centralized resource for depositing glycan structures, compositions and topologies, and to retrieve accession numbers for each of these registered entries. This will thus enable researchers to reference glycan structures simply by accession number, as opposed to by chemical structure, which has been a burden to integrate glycomics databases in the past.


Journal of Biomedical Semantics | 2013

Introducing glycomics data into the Semantic Web

Kiyoko F. Aoki-Kinoshita; Jerven T. Bolleman; Matthew Campbell; Shin Kawano; Jin-Dong Kim; Thomas Lütteke; Masaaki Matsubara; Shujiro Okuda; René Ranzinger; Hiromichi Sawaki; Toshihide Shikanai; Daisuke Shinmachi; Yoshinori Suzuki; Philip V. Toukach; Issaku Yamada; Nicolle H. Packer; Hisashi Narimatsu

BackgroundGlycoscience is a research field focusing on complex carbohydrates (otherwise known as glycans)a, which can, for example, serve as “switches” that toggle between different functions of a glycoprotein or glycolipid. Due to the advancement of glycomics technologies that are used to characterize glycan structures, many glycomics databases are now publicly available and provide useful information for glycoscience research. However, these databases have almost no link to other life science databases.ResultsIn order to implement support for the Semantic Web most efficiently for glycomics research, the developers of major glycomics databases agreed on a minimal standard for representing glycan structure and annotation information using RDF (Resource Description Framework). Moreover, all of the participants implemented this standard prototype and generated preliminary RDF versions of their data. To test the utility of the converted data, all of the data sets were uploaded into a Virtuoso triple store, and several SPARQL queries were tested as “proofs-of-concept” to illustrate the utility of the Semantic Web in querying across databases which were originally difficult to implement.ConclusionsWe were able to successfully retrieve information by linking UniCarbKB, GlycomeDB and JCGGDB in a single SPARQL query to obtain our target information. We also tested queries linking UniProt with GlycoEpitope as well as lectin data with GlycomeDB through PDB. As a result, we have been able to link proteomics data with glycomics data through the implementation of Semantic Web technologies, allowing for more flexible queries across these domains.


Bioinformatics | 2015

GlycoRDF: an ontology to standardize glycomics data in RDF

René Ranzinger; Kiyoko F. Aoki-Kinoshita; Matthew Campbell; Shin Kawano; Thomas Lütteke; Shujiro Okuda; Daisuke Shinmachi; Toshihide Shikanai; Hiromichi Sawaki; Philip V. Toukach; Masaaki Matsubara; Issaku Yamada; Hisashi Narimatsu

MOTIVATION Over the last decades several glycomics-based bioinformatics resources and databases have been created and released to the public. Unfortunately, there is no common standard in the representation of the stored information or a common machine-readable interface allowing bioinformatics groups to easily extract and cross-reference the stored information. RESULTS An international group of bioinformatics experts in the field of glycomics have worked together to create a standard Resource Description Framework (RDF) representation for glycomics data, focused on glycan sequences and related biological source, publications and experimental data. This RDF standard is defined by the GlycoRDF ontology and will be used by database providers to generate common machine-readable exports of the data stored in their databases. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION The ontology, supporting documentation and source code used by database providers to generate standardized RDF are available online (http://www.glycoinfo.org/GlycoRDF/).


Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2014

WURCS: The Web3 Unique Representation of Carbohydrate Structures

Ken-ichi Tanaka; Kiyoko F. Aoki-Kinoshita; Masaaki Kotera; Hiromichi Sawaki; Shinichiro Tsuchiya; Noriaki Fujita; Toshihide Shikanai; Masaki Kato; Shin Kawano; Issaku Yamada; Hisashi Narimatsu

In recent years, the Semantic Web has become the focus of life science database development as a means to link life science data in an effective and efficient manner. In order for carbohydrate data to be applied to this new technology, there are two requirements for carbohydrate data representations: (1) a linear notation which can be used as a URI (Uniform Resource Identifier) if needed and (2) a unique notation such that any published glycan structure can be represented distinctively. This latter requirement includes the possible representation of nonstandard monosaccharide units as a part of the glycan structure, as well as compositions, repeating units, and ambiguous structures where linkages/linkage positions are unidentified. Therefore, we have developed the Web3 Unique Representation of Carbohydrate Structures (WURCS) as a new linear notation for representing carbohydrates for the Semantic Web.


Glycobiology | 2017

GlyTouCan: an accessible glycan structure repository

Michael Tiemeyer; Kazuhiro Aoki; James C. Paulson; Richard D. Cummings; William S. York; Niclas G. Karlsson; Frédérique Lisacek; Nicolle H. Packer; Matthew P. Campbell; Nobuyuki P. Aoki; Akihiro Fujita; Masaaki Matsubara; Daisuke Shinmachi; Shinichiro Tsuchiya; Issaku Yamada; Michael Pierce; René Ranzinger; Hisashi Narimatsu; Kiyoko F. Aoki-Kinoshita

Rapid and continued growth in the generation of glycomic data has revealed the need for enhanced development of basic infrastructure for presenting and interpreting these datasets in a manner that engages the broader biomedical research community. Early in their growth, the genomic and proteomic fields implemented mechanisms for assigning unique gene and protein identifiers that were essential for organizing data presentation and for enhancing bioinformatic approaches to extracting knowledge. Similar unique identifiers are currently absent from glycomic data. In order to facilitate continued growth and expanded accessibility of glycomic data, the authors strongly encourage the glycomics community to coordinate the submission of their glycan structures to the GlyTouCan Repository and to make use of GlyTouCan identifiers in their communications and publications. The authors also deeply encourage journals to recommend a submission workflow in which submitted publications utilize GlyTouCan identifiers as a standard reference for explicitly describing glycan structures cited in manuscripts.


Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2017

WURCS 2.0 Update To Encapsulate Ambiguous Carbohydrate Structures

Masaaki Matsubara; Kiyoko F. Aoki-Kinoshita; Nobuyuki P. Aoki; Issaku Yamada; Hisashi Narimatsu

Accurate representation of structural ambiguity is important for storing carbohydrate structures containing varying levels of ambiguity in the literature and databases. Although many representations for carbohydrates have been developed in the past, a generalized but discrete representation format did not exist. We had previously developed the Web3 Unique Representation of Carbohydrate Structures (WURCS) in an attempt to define a generalizable and unique linear representation for carbohydrate structures. However, it lacked sufficient rules to uniquely describe ambiguous structures. In this work, we updated WURCS to handle such ambiguous monosaccharide structures. In particular, to handle structural ambiguity around (potential) carbonyl groups incidental to the carbohydrate analysis, we defined a representation of backbone carbons containing atomic-level ambiguity. As a result, we show that WURCS 2.0 can represent a wider variety of carbohydrate structures containing ambiguous monosaccharides, such as those whose ring closure is undefined or whose anomeric information is only known. This new format provides a representation of carbohydrates that was not possible before, and it is currently being used by the International Glycan Structure Repository GlyTouCan.


Archive | 2017

Using GlyTouCan Version 1.0: The First International Glycan Structure Repository

Daisuke Shinmachi; Issaku Yamada; Nobuyuki P. Aoki; Masaaki Matsubara; Kiyoko F. Aoki-Kinoshita; Hisashi Narimatsu

Glycans are known as the third major class of biopolymers next to DNA and proteins and have many biological roles by structural properties. The structure of glycans differs greatly from DNA and proteins in that they are branched structures of monosaccharides, as opposed to linear sequences of amino acids or nucleotides. Therefore, the assignment of glycan structure information has been a difficult problem. In order to solve this problem, an international team of glyco-scientists has collaborated to develop this repository, called GlyTouCan, to provide a centralized resource to deposit glycan structures and obtain unique accession numbers. GlyTouCan can accept glycan structures in any form, including ambiguous structures consisting of compositions and topologies. Users can register new glycan structures and additionally search for glycan structures that have been registered into this repository. All of these tools are freely available at https://glytoucan.org/. This will enable glycomics researchers to easily identify glycan structures by accession number. This chapter describes the procedures for the registration and search methods of glycan structures and provides an overview of the entry pages. Furthermore, troubleshooting tips and cautionary notes for using GlyTouCan are also included.


Glycobiology | 2013

The Third ACGG-DB Meeting report : towards an international collaborative infrastructure for glycobioinformatics

Kiyoko F. Aoki-Kinoshita; Hiromichi Sawaki; Hyun Joo An; Jin Won Cho; Daniel Hsu; Masaki Kato; Shin Kawano; Toshisuke Kawasaki; Kay Hooi Khoo; Jaehan Kim; Jin Dong Kim; Xianyu Li; Thomas Lütteke; Shujiro Okuda; Nicolle H. Packer; James C. Paulson; Rahul Raman; René Ranzinger; Huali Shen; Toshihide Shikanai; Issaku Yamada; Pengyuan Yang; Yoshiki Yamaguchi; Wantao Ying; Jong Shin Yoo; Yang Zhang; Hisashi Narimatsu


Glycobiology | 2013

The Fifth ACGG-DB Meeting Report: Towards an International Glycan Structure Repository

Kiyoko F. Aoki-Kinoshita; Hiromichi Sawaki; Hyun Joo An; Matthew Campbell; Qichen Cao; Richard D. Cummings; Daniel K Hsu; Masaki Kato; Toshisuke Kawasaki; Kay-Hooi Khoo; Jaehan Kim; Daniel Kolarich; Xianyu Li; Mingqi Liu; Masaaki Matsubara; Shujiro Okuda; Nicolle H. Packer; René Ranzinger; Huali Shen; Toshihide Shikanai; Daisuke Shinmachi; Philip V. Toukach; Issaku Yamada; Yoshiki Yamaguchi; Pengyuan Yang; Wantao Ying; Jong Shin Yoo; Yan Zhang; Yang Zhang; Hisashi Narimatsu

Collaboration


Dive into the Issaku Yamada's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hisashi Narimatsu

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Masaaki Matsubara

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daisuke Shinmachi

Soka University of America

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Toshihide Shikanai

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nobuyuki P. Aoki

Soka University of America

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hiromichi Sawaki

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge