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An Introduction to Taverna Workflows Franck Tanoh my Grid University of Manchester
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What is my Grid? my Grid is a suite components to support in silico experiments in biology Taverna workbench = my Grid user interface Originally designed to support bioinformatics Expanded into new areas: Chemoinformatics Health Informatics Medical Imaging Integrative Biology Open source – and always will be
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History EPSRC funded UK eScience Program Pilot Project
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OMII-UK University of Manchester ( my Grid) joined with the Universities of Edinburgh (OGSA-DAI) and Southampton (OMII phase 1) in March 2006 OMII-UK aims to provide software and support to enable a sustained future for the UK e-Science community and its international collaborators. A guarantee of development and support
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The Life Science Community In silico Biology is an open Community Open access to data Open access to resources Open access to tools Open access to applications Global in silico biological research
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The Community Problems Everything is Distributed –Data, Resources and Scientists Heterogeneous data Very few standards –I/O formats, data representation, annotation –Everything is a string! Integration of data and interoperability of resources is difficult
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Lots of Resources NAR 2007 – 968 databases
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Traditional Bioinformatics 12181 acatttctac caacagtgga tgaggttgtt ggtctatgtt ctcaccaaat ttggtgttgt 12241 cagtctttta aattttaacc tttagagaag agtcatacag tcaatagcct tttttagctt 12301 gaccatccta atagatacac agtggtgtct cactgtgatt ttaatttgca ttttcctgct 12361 gactaattat gttgagcttg ttaccattta gacaacttca ttagagaagt gtctaatatt 12421 taggtgactt gcctgttttt ttttaattgg gatcttaatt tttttaaatt attgatttgt 12481 aggagctatt tatatattct ggatacaagt tctttatcag atacacagtt tgtgactatt 12541 ttcttataag tctgtggttt ttatattaat gtttttattg atgactgttt tttacaattg 12601 tggttaagta tacatgacat aaaacggatt atcttaacca ttttaaaatg taaaattcga 12661 tggcattaag tacatccaca atattgtgca actatcacca ctatcatact ccaaaagggc 12721 atccaatacc cattaagctg tcactcccca atctcccatt ttcccacccc tgacaatcaa 12781 taacccattt tctgtctcta tggatttgcc tgttctggat attcatatta atagaatcaa
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Cutting and Pasting Advantages: –Low Technology on both server and client side –Very Robust: Hard to break. –Data Integration happens along the way Disadvantages: –Time Consuming (and painful!) Can be repeated rarely Limited to small data sets. –Error Prone : Poor repeatability How do you do this for a genome/proteome/metabolome of information!
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Pipeline Programming Advantages –Repeatable –Allows automation –Quick, reliable, efficient Disadvantages –Requires programming skills –Difficult to modify –Requires local tool and database installation –Requires tool and database maintenance!!!
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What we want as a solution A system that is: Allows automation Allows easy repetition, verification and sharing of experiments Works on distributed resource Requires few programming skills Runs on a local desktop / laptop
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my Grid as a solution my Grid allows the automated orchestration of in silico experiments over distributed resources from the scientist’s desktop Built on computer science technologies of: Web services Workflows Semantic web technologies
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Web Services Web services support machine-to-machine interaction over a network. Note: NOT the same as services on the web Web services are a: –technology and standard for exposing code / databases with an API that can be consumed by a third party remotely. –describes how to interact with it. They are: Self-contained Self-describing Modular Platform independent
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Workflows –General technique for describing and enacting a process –Describes what you want to do, not how you want to do it –High level description of the experiment Repeat Masker Web service GenScan Web Service Blast Web Service
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Workflow language specifies how bioinformatics processes fit together. High level workflow diagram separated from any lower level coding – you don’t have to be a coder to build workflows. Workflow is a kind of script or protocol that you configure when you run it. Easier to explain, share, relocate, reuse and repurpose. Workflow Model Workflow is the integrator of knowledge The METHODS section of a scientific publication Workflows
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Workflow Advantages Automation –Capturing processes in an explicit manner –Tedium! Computers don’t get bored/distracted/hungry/impatient! –Saves repeated time and effort Modification, maintenance, substitution and personalisation Easy to share, explain, relocate, reuse and build Releases Scientists/Bioinformaticians to do other work Record –Provenance: what the data is like, where it came from, its quality –Management of data (LSID - Life Science Identifiers)
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Different Workflow Systems Kepler Triana DiscoveryNet Taverna Geodise Pegasus Pipeline Pilot Each has differences in action, language, access restrictions, subject areas
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Taverna Workflow Components Scufl Simple Conceptual Unified Flow Language Taverna Writing, running workflows & examining results SOAPLAB Makes applications available SOAPLAB Web Service Any Application Web Service e.g. DDBJ BLAST
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An Open World Open domain services and resources. Taverna accesses 3000+ services Third party – we don’t own them – we didn’t build them All the major providers –NCBI, DDBJ, EBI … Enforce NO common data model. Quality Web Services considered desirable
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Adding your own web services SoapLabJava API Consumer import Java API of libSBML as workflow components http://www.ebi.ac.uk/soaplab/
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Services Landscape
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Shield the Scientist – Bury the Complexity Workflow enactor Processor Plain Web Service Soap lab Processor Local Java App Processor Enactor Processor Bio MOBY Processor WSRF Processor Bio MART Styx client Processor R package... Scufl Model Taverna Workbench Workflow Execution Application Simple Conceptual Unified Flow Language
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What can you do with my Grid? ~37000 downloads Users worldwide US, Singapore, UK, Europe, Australia Systems biology Proteomics Gene/protein annotation Microarray data analysis Medical image analysis Heart simulations High throughput screening Genotype/Phenotype studies Health Informatics Astronomy Chemoinformatics Data integration
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http://www.genomics.liv.ac.uk/tryps/trypsindex.html Trypanosomiasis in Africa Andy Brass Steve Kemp Paul Fisher
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Trypanosomiasis Study A form of Sleeping sickness in cattle – Known as n’gana Caused by Trypanosoma brucei Can we breed cattle resistant to n’gana infection? What are the causes of the differences between resistant and susceptible strains?
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Trypanosomiasis Study Understanding Phenotype Comparing resistant vs susceptible strains – Microarrays Understanding Genotype Mapping quantitative traits – Classical genetics QTL Need to access microarray data, genomic sequence information, pathway databases AND integrate the results
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? 200 Microarray + QTL Phenotypic response investigated using microarray in form of expressed genes or evidence provided through QTL mapping Genotype Phenotype Genes captured in microarray experiment and present in QTL region
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Key: A – Retrieve genes in QTL region B – Annotate genes with external database Ids C – Cross-reference Ids with KEGG gene ids D – Retrieve microarray data from MaxD database E – For each KEGG gene get the pathways it’s involved in F – For each pathway get a description of what it does G – For each KEGG gene get a description of what it does
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Results Identified a pathway for which its correlating gene (Daxx) is believed to play a role in trypanosomiasis resistance. Manual analysis on the microarray and QTL data had failed to identify this gene as a candidate.
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Why was the Workflow Approach Successful? Workflow analysed each piece of data systematically –Eliminated user bias and premature filtering of datasets and results leading to single sided, expert-driven hypotheses The size of the QTL and amount of the microarray data made a manual approach impractical Workflows capture exactly where data came from and how it was analysed Workflow output produced a manageable amount of data for the biologists to interpret and verify –“make sense of this data” -> “does this make sense?”
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Trichuris muris (mouse whipworm) infection parasite model of the human parasite - Trichuris trichuria) Identified the biological pathways involved in sex dependence in the mouse model, previously believed to be involved in the ability of mice to expel the parasite. Manual experimentation: Two year study of candidate genes, processes unidentified Workflows: trypanosomiasis cattle experiment was reused without change. Analysis of the resulting data by a biologist found the processes in a couple of days. Joanne Pennock, Richard Grencis University of manchester
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Workflow Reuse – Workflows are Scientific Protocols – Share them! Addisons Disease SNP design Protein annotation Microarray analysis
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A workflow marketplace
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A Practical Guide to Building and Managing in silico Experiments
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Semantic Web Technologies my Grid built on Web Services, Workflows AND semantic web technologies Semantic web technologies are used to: –Find appropriate services during workflow design –Find similar workflows for reuse and repurposing –Record the process and outcome of an experiment, in context ->>>> the experimental provenance
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Finding Services There are over 3000 distributed services. How do we find an appropriate one? Find services by their function instead of their name We need to annotate services by their functions. The services might be distributed, but a registry of service descriptions can be central and queried
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Feta Semantic Discovery Feta is the my Grid component that can query the service annotations and find services Questions we can ask: Find me all the services that perform a multiple sequence alignment And accept protein sequences in FASTA format as input
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Specialises my Grid Ontology Upper level ontology Task ontology Informatics ontology Molecular Biology ontology Bioinformatics ontology Web Service ontology Contributes to sequence biological_sequence protein_sequence nucleotide_sequence DNA_sequence protein_structure_feature BLASTp service Similarity Search Service BLAST service InterProScan service
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Annotations Feta has been available for over a year Only just been included in the release Need critical mass of service annotations before release By demonstrating the use of service annotation, we aim to encourage service providers to provide the annotations in the future Annotation experiments with users and domain experts Domain expert annotations much better –We now have a domain expert for full-time service annotation
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Data Management Workflows can generate vast amount of data - how can we manage and track it? We need to manage –data AND –metadata AND –experiment provenance Workflow experiments may consist of many workflows of the same, or different experiments. Scientists need to check back over past results, compare workflow runs and share workflow runs with colleagues
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Provenance – the my Grid logbook Who, What, Where, When, Why?, How? Context Interpretation Logging & Debugging Reproducibility and repeatability Evidence & Audit Non-repudiation Credit and Attribution Credibility Accurate reuse and interpretation Just good scientific practice Smart Tea BioMOBY
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From which Ensembl gene does pathway mmu004620 come from? Advanced Provenance Features Smart re-running Experiment mining Cross experiment mining
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Conclusions Web services and workflows are powerful technologies for in silico science –automation –high throughput experiments –systematic analysis –Interoperability of distributed resources
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Contact Us Taverna development is user-driven Please tell us what you would like to see via the mailing lists: –Taverna-Users and Taverna-Hackers Download software and find out more at: http://www.mygrid.org.uk http://taverna.sourceforge.net
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my Grid acknowledgements Carole Goble, Norman Paton, Robert Stevens, Anil Wipat, David De Roure, Steve Pettifer OMII-UK Tom Oinn, Katy Wolstencroft, Daniele Turi, June Finch, Stuart Owen, David Withers, Stian Soiland, Franck Tanoh, Matthew Gamble, Alan Williams, Ian Dunlop Research Martin Szomszor, Duncan Hull, Jun Zhao, Pinar Alper, Antoon Goderis, Alastair Hampshire, Qiuwei Yu, Wang Kaixuan. Current contributors Matthew Pocock, James Marsh, Khalid Belhajjame, PsyGrid project, Bergen people, EMBRACE people. User Advocates and their bosses Simon Pearce, Claire Jennings, Hannah Tipney, May Tassabehji, Andy Brass, Paul Fisher, Peter Li, Simon Hubbard, Tracy Craddock, Doug Kell, Marco Roos, Matthew Pocock, Mark Wilkinson Past Contributors Matthew Addis, Nedim Alpdemir, Tim Carver, Rich Cawley, Neil Davis, Alvaro Fernandes, Justin Ferris, Robert Gaizaukaus, Kevin Glover, Chris Greenhalgh, Mark Greenwood, Yikun Guo, Ananth Krishna, Phillip Lord, Darren Marvin, Simon Miles, Luc Moreau, Arijit Mukherjee, Juri Papay, Savas Parastatidis, Milena Radenkovic, Stefan Rennick-Egglestone, Peter Rice, Martin Senger, Nick Sharman, Victor Tan, Paul Watson, and Chris Wroe. Industrial Dennis Quan, Sean Martin, Michael Niemi (IBM), Chimatica. Funding EPSRC, Wellcome Trust.
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Changes to Scientific Practice –Systematic and comprehensive automation Eliminated user bias and premature filtering of datasets and results leading to single sided, expert-driven hypotheses –Dry people hypothesise, wet people validate “ make sense of this data” -> “does this make sense?” –Workflow factories Different dataset, different result –Workflow market –Accurate provenance
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