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mauede@alice.it
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@mauedealiceit-3511
Last seen 10.2 years ago
I browsed through your paper.
It looks like CORNA is not another pair (miRNA - target gene)
prediction program like miRANDA and so on ... ?
If I am guessing right (am I ... ?) then what is CORNA basing its
miRNA -target_gene affinity score on ?
In my mind I have the three phases that miRANDA uses to score such
"affinity". Phase-1 implements some empirical Biology rules, phase-2
implements free energy minimization, phase-3 implements conservation
of species. Each phase is a finer screening that assigns a score to
the target match. The final score is the total.
I cannot understand which criteria (empirical or computational) are at
the base of CORNA assessment.
Is it a synthesis of the predictions of the many programs like miRANDA
(for instance many are referred in miRecords).
How is the (miRNA-target_gene) prediction, from computational
programs like miRANDA, accounted for by CORNA ?
How is the biologists' (miRNA-target_gene) validation accounted for
by CORNA ?
I read it uses a number of statistical tests but I cannot figure out
which data the statistics is applied to ... maybe because
I am not familiar with the information stored in the databases
mentioned in the paper.
Thank you.
Kind regards,
Maura
-----Original Message-----
From: bioconductor-bounces@stat.math.ethz.ch
[mailto:bioconductor-bounces@stat.math.ethz.ch] On Behalf Of Michal
Okoniewski
Sent: 17 June 2009 15:26
To: Wacek Kusnierczyk; mauede@alice.it
Cc: bioconductor@stat.math.ethz.ch
Subject: Re: [BioC] miRNA and validated/predicted target genes
-----Original Message-----
From: bioconductor-bounces@stat.math.ethz.ch on behalf of Wacek
Kusnierczyk
Sent: Wed 6/17/2009 4:01 PM
To: mauede@alice.it
Cc: bioconductor@stat.math.ethz.ch
Subject: Re: [BioC] miRNA and validated/predicted target genes
mauede@alice.it wrote:
> I posted the following question to R mailing-list and was adviced to
contact the BioConductors team.
>
> I have to find humans miRNA sequences and the correspondent
validated
and/or predicted gene sequences.
> The only database I know of is http://mirecords.umn.edu/miRecords
where all such information is accessed through a set of structured web
site pages.
> I wonder whether R or C++ provides an interface to automatically
extract such data from miRecords or any other similar database.
>
> I would greatly appreciate any suggestion even about other databases
from where it is possible to get the same sort of data and s/w
packages
that facilitate database access.
>
>
alternatively to mirecords, you can download fasta-formatted human
(and
other) mirs and targets from mirbase at sanger [1], and importing
fasta
to r should be an easy task for you. alternatively, there are
database
dumps available.
i don't know of an r/bioc package targetted specifically at a mirna
database; it's possible that the data are not available for
programmatic access otherwise than through a bulk download (or html
parsing, if you prefer...)
vQ
[1] http://microrna.sanger.ac.uk
==================
I played with miRGen :
http://www.diana.pcbi.upenn.edu/cgi-bin/miRGen/v3/Targets.cgi#Results
(quite comprehensive, seems to include miranda and several other
target
databases)
and TargetScan: http://www.targetscan.org/
but as Wacek wrote - there's no biomaRt-like interface (at least I did
not see...) but a lot of fun with html/flat file parsing instead :)
Cheers,
Michal
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