Take me to the IBMI webtools homepage.
BITOLA is an interactive literature-based biomedical discovery support system. The purpose of the system is to help the biomedical researchers make new discoveries by discovering potentially new relations between biomedical concepts. The set of concepts currently contains MeSH (Medical Subject Heading), which is used to index Medline, and human genes from HUGO. The potentially new relations are discovered by mining the Medline database.
To make the system more suitable for disease candidate-gene discovery and to decrease the number of candidate relations, we integrated background knowledge about the chromosomal location of the starting disease as well as the chromosomal location of the candidate genes from resources such as Entrez Gene, HUGO and OMIM. The BITOLA system can also be used as an alternative way of searching the Medline database.
To understand the details of the system and see some examples of its use, you are strongly recommended to read these papers.
The system is available in two versions: "closed discovery" and "open discovery".
Closed discovery allows the input of two concepts (Example 1: a disorder and a gene. Example 2: a drug and a side effect) and generates potential
explanations of the relationship between two entities. It does this by searching published literature to finds intermediate links.
Open discovery allows the input of a single concept, then categories for first-order relatives of that concept, then categories
for relatives of those first order concepts. Thus it can link from a disease to related drugs, then to genes related to those drugs
and then test if those genes have been mentioned/tested in association with the disease. If the answer is no,
then the gene is potentially related yet untested in the literature. Thus the open discovery tool is a nominator
of new genes, drugs or neuroscience correlates to be investigated with diseases, disorders, physiological responses
or any other phenotype.
Please click on the pictures to access the following tools:
(NOTE: If you have not used BITOLA before, please read the tutorial below first)
Tool 1: Closed discovery system
Tool 2: Open discovery system
Literature-based discovery (LBD) is about finding connections between otherwise disconnected areas of literature. The field began in 1983 with Don Swanson who came across two pieces of literature which were clearly related, but had not been linked. One paper described how fish oils thin the blood - another paper evidenced that Reynold's Disease was associated with thicker blood. However, it appeared as though no one but Swanson had read both papers and realised the clear implication that fish oils may ammeliorate Reynold's Disease. After investigation, this turned out to be the case. Swanson (and later, others) then made efforts to generate bioinformatics tools to uncover other similar "discoveries" latent in the literature, but as yet not explicitly mentioned or tested. This is the aim of modern literature-baesd discovery tools such as BITOLA.
Using the Closed Discovery System: a "gene explanation" example.
When you open the closed discovery tool, the screen will look something like this:
Once you have tried using the Closed Discovery system, you will find the Open Discovery System to be very similar.
The only difference is the structure. With closed discovery you nominate X and Z then search in Y (limiting categories, if desired).
With open discovery, you nominate X, then search in Y (limiting categories, if desired), then search in Z (limiting categories, if desired).
Vsebine na strani so zastarele in se ne posodabljajo več. Stara stran zajema določene članke in vsebine, ki pa morajo biti še vedno dostopne.
Za nove, posodobljene vsebine se obrnite na http://ibmi.mf.uni-lj.si/