Heterogeneous Biomedical Database Integration Using a Hybrid Strategy: A p53 Cancer Research Database

Complex problems in life science research give rise to multidisciplinary collaboration, and hence, to the need for heterogeneous database integration. The tumor suppressor p53 is mutated in close to 50% of human cancers, and a small drug-like molecule with the ability to restore native function to c...

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Main Authors: Vadim Y. Bichutskiy, Richard Colman, Rainer K. Brachmann, Richard H. Lathrop
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2006-01-01
Series:Cancer Informatics
Subjects:
p53
Online Access:http://la-press.com/article.php?article_id=98
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spelling doaj-864d111cb41e4602ba315dc5963c3c382020-11-25T03:13:34ZengSAGE PublishingCancer Informatics1176-93512006-01-012277287Heterogeneous Biomedical Database Integration Using a Hybrid Strategy: A p53 Cancer Research DatabaseVadim Y. BichutskiyRichard ColmanRainer K. BrachmannRichard H. LathropComplex problems in life science research give rise to multidisciplinary collaboration, and hence, to the need for heterogeneous database integration. The tumor suppressor p53 is mutated in close to 50% of human cancers, and a small drug-like molecule with the ability to restore native function to cancerous p53 mutants is a long-held medical goal of cancer treatment. The Cancer Research DataBase (CRDB) was designed in support of a project to find such small molecules. As a cancer informatics project, the CRDB involved small molecule data, computational docking results, functional assays, and protein structure data. As an example of the hybrid strategy for data integration, it combined the mediation and data warehousing approaches. This paper uses the CRDB to illustrate the hybrid strategy as a viable approach to heterogeneous data integration in biomedicine, and provides a design method for those considering similar systems. More efficient data sharing implies increased productivity, and, hopefully, improved chances of success in cancer research. (Code and database schemas are freely downloadable, http://www.igb.uci.edu/research/research.html.)http://la-press.com/article.php?article_id=98CancerData WarehousingHeterogeneous Database IntegrationHybrid Database IntegrationMediationp53
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vadim Y. Bichutskiy
Richard Colman
Rainer K. Brachmann
Richard H. Lathrop
spellingShingle Vadim Y. Bichutskiy
Richard Colman
Rainer K. Brachmann
Richard H. Lathrop
Heterogeneous Biomedical Database Integration Using a Hybrid Strategy: A p53 Cancer Research Database
Cancer Informatics
Cancer
Data Warehousing
Heterogeneous Database Integration
Hybrid Database Integration
Mediation
p53
author_facet Vadim Y. Bichutskiy
Richard Colman
Rainer K. Brachmann
Richard H. Lathrop
author_sort Vadim Y. Bichutskiy
title Heterogeneous Biomedical Database Integration Using a Hybrid Strategy: A p53 Cancer Research Database
title_short Heterogeneous Biomedical Database Integration Using a Hybrid Strategy: A p53 Cancer Research Database
title_full Heterogeneous Biomedical Database Integration Using a Hybrid Strategy: A p53 Cancer Research Database
title_fullStr Heterogeneous Biomedical Database Integration Using a Hybrid Strategy: A p53 Cancer Research Database
title_full_unstemmed Heterogeneous Biomedical Database Integration Using a Hybrid Strategy: A p53 Cancer Research Database
title_sort heterogeneous biomedical database integration using a hybrid strategy: a p53 cancer research database
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Cancer Informatics
issn 1176-9351
publishDate 2006-01-01
description Complex problems in life science research give rise to multidisciplinary collaboration, and hence, to the need for heterogeneous database integration. The tumor suppressor p53 is mutated in close to 50% of human cancers, and a small drug-like molecule with the ability to restore native function to cancerous p53 mutants is a long-held medical goal of cancer treatment. The Cancer Research DataBase (CRDB) was designed in support of a project to find such small molecules. As a cancer informatics project, the CRDB involved small molecule data, computational docking results, functional assays, and protein structure data. As an example of the hybrid strategy for data integration, it combined the mediation and data warehousing approaches. This paper uses the CRDB to illustrate the hybrid strategy as a viable approach to heterogeneous data integration in biomedicine, and provides a design method for those considering similar systems. More efficient data sharing implies increased productivity, and, hopefully, improved chances of success in cancer research. (Code and database schemas are freely downloadable, http://www.igb.uci.edu/research/research.html.)
topic Cancer
Data Warehousing
Heterogeneous Database Integration
Hybrid Database Integration
Mediation
p53
url http://la-press.com/article.php?article_id=98
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