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Dive into the research topics where José Carbonell is active.

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Featured researches published by José Carbonell.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

Babelomics: an integrative platform for the analysis of transcriptomics, proteomics and genomic data with advanced functional profiling

Ignacio Medina; José Carbonell; Luis Pulido; Sara C. Madeira; Stefan Goetz; Ana Conesa; Joaquín Tárraga; Alberto Pascual-Montano; Rubén Nogales-Cadenas; Javier Santoyo; Francisco M. Garcia; Martina Marbá; David Montaner; Joaquín Dopazo

Babelomics is a response to the growing necessity of integrating and analyzing different types of genomic data in an environment that allows an easy functional interpretation of the results. Babelomics includes a complete suite of methods for the analysis of gene expression data that include normalization (covering most commercial platforms), pre-processing, differential gene expression (case-controls, multiclass, survival or continuous values), predictors, clustering; large-scale genotyping assays (case controls and TDTs, and allows population stratification analysis and correction). All these genomic data analysis facilities are integrated and connected to multiple options for the functional interpretation of the experiments. Different methods of functional enrichment or gene set enrichment can be used to understand the functional basis of the experiment analyzed. Many sources of biological information, which include functional (GO, KEGG, Biocarta, Reactome, etc.), regulatory (Transfac, Jaspar, ORegAnno, miRNAs, etc.), text-mining or protein–protein interaction modules can be used for this purpose. Finally a tool for the de novo functional annotation of sequences has been included in the system. This provides support for the functional analysis of non-model species. Mirrors of Babelomics or command line execution of their individual components are now possible. Babelomics is available at http://www.babelomics.org.


Bioinformatics | 2012

Qualimap: evaluating next-generation sequencing alignment data

Fernando Garcia-Alcalde; Konstantin Okonechnikov; José Carbonell; Luis Miguel Cruz; Stefan Götz; Sonia Tarazona; Joaquín Dopazo; Thomas F. Meyer; Ana Conesa

MOTIVATIONnThe sequence alignment/map (SAM) and the binary alignment/map (BAM) formats have become the standard method of representation of nucleotide sequence alignments for next-generation sequencing data. SAM/BAM files usually contain information from tens to hundreds of millions of reads. Often, the sequencing technology, protocol and/or the selected mapping algorithm introduce some unwanted biases in these data. The systematic detection of such biases is a non-trivial task that is crucial to drive appropriate downstream analyses.nnnRESULTSnWe have developed Qualimap, a Java application that supports user-friendly quality control of mapping data, by considering sequence features and their genomic properties. Qualimap takes sequence alignment data and provides graphical and statistical analyses for the evaluation of data. Such quality-control data are vital for highlighting problems in the sequencing and/or mapping processes, which must be addressed prior to further analyses.nnnAVAILABILITYnQualimap is freely available from http://www.qualimap.org.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2011

Phylemon 2.0: a suite of web-tools for molecular evolution, phylogenetics, phylogenomics and hypotheses testing

Rubén Sánchez; François Serra; Joaquín Tárraga; Ignacio Medina; José Carbonell; Luis Pulido; Alejandro de María; Salvador Capella-Gutiérrez; Jaime Huerta-Cepas; Toni Gabaldón; Joaquín Dopazo; Hernán Dopazo

Phylemon 2.0 is a new release of the suite of web tools for molecular evolution, phylogenetics, phylogenomics and hypotheses testing. It has been designed as a response to the increasing demand of molecular sequence analyses for experts and non-expert users. Phylemon 2.0 has several unique features that differentiates it from other similar web resources: (i) it offers an integrated environment that enables evolutionary analyses, format conversion, file storage and edition of results; (ii) it suggests further analyses, thereby guiding the users through the web server; and (iii) it allows users to design and save phylogenetic pipelines to be used over multiple genes (phylogenomics). Altogether, Phylemon 2.0 integrates a suite of 30 tools covering sequence alignment reconstruction and trimming; tree reconstruction, visualization and manipulation; and evolutionary hypotheses testing.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2008

Babelomics: advanced functional profiling of transcriptomics, proteomics and genomics experiments

Fatima Al-Shahrour; José Carbonell; Pablo Minguez; Stefan Goetz; Ana Conesa; Joaquín Tárraga; Ignacio Medina; Eva Alloza; David Montaner; Joaquín Dopazo

We present a new version of Babelomics, a complete suite of web tools for the functional profiling of genome scale experiments, with new and improved methods as well as more types of functional definitions. Babelomics includes different flavours of conventional functional enrichment methods as well as more advanced gene set analysis methods that makes it a unique tool among the similar resources available. In addition to the well-known functional definitions (GO, KEGG), Babelomics includes new ones such as Biocarta pathways or text mining-derived functional terms. Regulatory modules implemented include transcriptional control (Transfac, CisRed) and other levels of regulation such as miRNA-mediated interference. Moreover, Babelomics allows for sub-selection of terms in order to test more focused hypothesis. Also gene annotation correspondence tables can be imported, which allows testing with user-defined functional modules. Finally, a tool for the ‘de novo’ functional annotation of sequences has been included in the system. This allows using yet unannotated organisms in the program. Babelomics has been extensively re-engineered and now it includes the use of web services and Web 2.0 technology features, a new user interface with persistent sessions and a new extended database of gene identifiers. Babelomics is available at http://www.babelomics.org


Nucleic Acids Research | 2008

GEPAS, a web-based tool for microarray data analysis and interpretation

Joaquín Tárraga; Ignacio Medina; José Carbonell; Jaime Huerta-Cepas; Pablo Minguez; Eva Alloza; Fatima Al-Shahrour; Susana Vegas-Azcárate; Stefan Goetz; Pablo Escobar; Francisco García-García; Ana Conesa; David Montaner; Joaquín Dopazo

Gene Expression Profile Analysis Suite (GEPAS) is one of the most complete and extensively used web-based packages for microarray data analysis. During its more than 5 years of activity it has continuously been updated to keep pace with the state-of-the-art in the changing microarray data analysis arena. GEPAS offers diverse analysis options that include well established as well as novel algorithms for normalization, gene selection, class prediction, clustering and functional profiling of the experiment. New options for time-course (or dose-response) experiments, microarray-based class prediction, new clustering methods and new tests for differential expression have been included. The new pipeliner module allows automating the execution of sequential analysis steps by means of a simple but powerful graphic interface. An extensive re-engineering of GEPAS has been carried out which includes the use of web services and Web 2.0 technology features, a new user interface with persistent sessions and a new extended database of gene identifiers. GEPAS is nowadays the most quoted web tool in its field and it is extensively used by researchers of many countries and its records indicate an average usage rate of 500 experiments per day. GEPAS, is available at http://www.gepas.org.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2009

Gene set-based analysis of polymorphisms: finding pathways or biological processes associated to traits in genome-wide association studies

Ignacio Medina; David Montaner; Núria Bonifaci; Miguel Angel Pujana; José Carbonell; Joaquín Tárraga; Fatima Al-Shahrour; Joaquín Dopazo

Genome-wide association studies have become a popular strategy to find associations of genes to traits of interest. Despite the high-resolution available today to carry out genotyping studies, the success of its application in real studies has been limited by the testing strategy used. As an alternative to brute force solutions involving the use of very large cohorts, we propose the use of the Gene Set Analysis (GSA), a different analysis strategy based on testing the association of modules of functionally related genes. We show here how the Gene Set-based Analysis of Polymorphisms (GeSBAP), which is a simple implementation of the GSA strategy for the analysis of genome-wide association studies, provides a significant increase in the power testing for this type of studies. GeSBAP is freely available at http://bioinfo.cipf.es/gesbap/


Genome Medicine | 2012

A map of human microRNA variation uncovers unexpectedly high levels of variability.

José Carbonell; Eva Alloza; Pablo Arce; Salud Borrego; Javier Santoyo; Macarena Ruiz-Ferrer; Ignacio Medina; Jorge Jiménez-Almazán; Cristina Méndez-Vidal; María González-del Pozo; Alicia Vela; S.S. Bhattacharya; Guillermo Antiñolo; Joaquín Dopazo

BackgroundMicroRNAs (miRNAs) are key components of the gene regulatory network in many species. During the past few years, these regulatory elements have been shown to be involved in an increasing number and range of diseases. Consequently, the compilation of a comprehensive map of natural variability in a healthy population seems an obvious requirement for future research on miRNA-related pathologies.MethodsData on 14 populations from the 1000 Genomes Project were analyzed, along with new data extracted from 60 exomes of healthy individuals from a population from southern Spain, sequenced in the context of the Medical Genome Project, to derive an accurate map of miRNA variability.ResultsDespite the common belief that miRNAs are highly conserved elements, analysis of the sequences of the 1,152 individuals indicated that the observed level of variability is double what was expected. A total of 527 variants were found. Among these, 45 variants affected the recognition region of the corresponding miRNA and were found in 43 different miRNAs, 26 of which are known to be involved in 57 diseases. Different parts of the mature structure of the miRNA were affected to different degrees by variants, which suggests the existence of a selective pressure related to the relative functional impact of the change. Moreover, 41 variants showed a significant deviation from the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, which supports the existence of a selective process against some alleles. The average number of variants per individual in miRNAs was 28.ConclusionsDespite an expectation that miRNAs would be highly conserved genomic elements, our study reports a level of variability comparable to that observed for coding genes.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

Inferring the functional effect of gene expression changes in signaling pathways

Patricia Sebastián-León; José Carbonell; Francisco Salavert; Rubén Sánchez; Ignacio Medina; Joaquín Dopazo

Signaling pathways constitute a valuable source of information that allows interpreting the way in which alterations in gene activities affect to particular cell functionalities. There are web tools available that allow viewing and editing pathways, as well as representing experimental data on them. However, few methods aimed to identify the signaling circuits, within a pathway, associated to the biological problem studied exist and none of them provide a convenient graphical web interface. We present PATHiWAYS, a web-based signaling pathway visualization system that infers changes in signaling that affect cell functionality from the measurements of gene expression values in typical expression microarray case–control experiments. A simple probabilistic model of the pathway is used to estimate the probabilities for signal transmission from any receptor to any final effector molecule (taking into account the pathway topology) using for this the individual probabilities of gene product presence/absence inferred from gene expression values. Significant changes in these probabilities allow linking different cell functionalities triggered by the pathway to the biological problem studied. PATHiWAYS is available at: http://pathiways.babelomics.org/.


BMC Genomics | 2015

Involvement of a citrus meiotic recombination TTC-repeat motif in the formation of gross deletions generated by ionizing radiation and MULE activation

Javier Terol; Victoria Ibañez; José Carbonell; Roberto Alonso; Leandro H Estornell; Concetta Licciardello; Ivo Gut; Joaquín Dopazo; Manuel Talon

BackgroundTransposable-element mediated chromosomal rearrangements require the involvement of two transposons and two double-strand breaks (DSB) located in close proximity. In radiobiology, DSB proximity is also a major factor contributing to rearrangements. However, the whole issue of DSB proximity remains virtually unexplored.ResultsBased on DNA sequencing analysis we show that the genomes of 2 derived mutations, Arrufatina (sport) and Nero (irradiation), share a similar 2xa0Mb deletion of chromosome 3. A 7xa0kb Mutator-like element found in Clemenules was present in Arrufatina in inverted orientation flanking the 5′ end of the deletion. The Arrufatina Mule displayed “dissimilar” 9-bp target site duplications separated by 2xa0Mb. Fine-scale single nucleotide variant analyses of the deleted fragments identified a TTC-repeat sequence motif located in the center of the deletion responsible of a meiotic crossover detected in the citrus reference genome.ConclusionsTaken together, this information is compatible with the proposal that in both mutants, the TTC-repeat motif formed a triplex DNA structure generating a loop that brought in close proximity the originally distinct reactive ends. In Arrufatina, the loop brought the Mule ends nearby the 2 distinct insertion target sites and the inverted insertion of the transposable element between these target sites provoked the release of the in-between fragment. This proposal requires the involvement of a unique transposon and sheds light on the unresolved question of how two distinct sites become located in close proximity. These observations confer a crucial role to the TTC-repeats in fundamental plant processes as meiotic recombination and chromosomal rearrangements.


Annals of Applied Biology | 2014

Molecular interactions between sugar beet and Polymyxa betae during its life cycle

Nicolas Desoignies; José Carbonell; Jean-Sébastien Moreau; Ana Conesa; Joaquín Dopazo; Anne Legrève

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Joaquín Dopazo

Spanish National Research Council

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Javier Terol

Polytechnic University of Valencia

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Joaquín Dopazo

Spanish National Research Council

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Manuel Talon

Polytechnic University of Valencia

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Francisco R. Tadeo

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Javier Santoyo

Technical University of Lisbon

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