Chinook's usage in the Sockeye 3D Genome Browser
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Sockeye is a comparative genomics browser that was developed at the BC Genome Sciences Centre in 2003. It was designed to allow users to manipulate and observe genomic annotation across multiple genomes, with the specific aim of aiding in the elucidation of transcription factors. To enable users to access, a wide variety of established bioinformatics tools for phylogenetic footprinting, motif discovery/scanning, and primer prediction, the Chinook project was embarked on. Chinook aimed to provide Sockeye with a rich and diverse set of bioinformatics utilities. It soon became apparent, that instead of following in the footsteps of other projects that somehow linked their application to bioinformatics utilities, we could create a ubiquitous, distributed framework for integrating this functionality into all advanced genomics applications. For instance, multiple projects could take advantage of the integration efforts of individual users using Chinook; if a user was adding Clustalw, Lagan, Genscan, or any other program to Sockeye via Chinook, they would actually be making this service available to all the applications that use Chinook. It is strongly felt that this would capture the current state-of-the-art in bioinformatics, and allow for richer, more competitive comparisons of the available algorithms.
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Below are some screenshots of Chinook being used in Sockeye
Selecting alignment regions in Sockeye
Chinook loading in Sockeye
Discovering services with Chinook
Selecting an alignment algorithm from Chinook
Entering parameters in Chinook
Job Submission via Chinook
Final results in Sockeye
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