Cassandre is a project of personal database system integrating a "user-friendly" interface to manage and explore multiple sets of large-scale experimental results in biology.
This project is funded and developed at the Institut Pasteur of Paris.
Current state: PRE-ALPHA version, as of April 2016
Large-scale experiments that generate quantitative data, such as changes in the levels of thousands of RNA or protein molecules under various conditions, are a hallmark of modern biology. Many other experiments, like those measuring functional interactions between mutant alleles or the variation in the translation status of mRNAs are also characterized by the same basic information unit: an experimental condition, a genomic feature (usually a gene) and an associated numerical value.
We propose the development of such a tool for the exploration of large-scale data. This new “window” to quantitative experimental results aims to be simple, extensible, open and based on the interactive web interface developed by the coordinator of the project for the analysis of a collection of hundreds of genome-wide genetic interaction screen results.
The objectives of our project are:
A prototype of user interface for quantitative data exploration was developed by the coordinator of the project. However, this prototype is specialized in a given type of experimental data obtained on the yeast S. cerevisiae and hardwired to a specialized database system.
The ultimate goal of our project, which goes beyond the current proposal and depends on its completion, is to enable the identification of patterns and links in experimental data that would lead to new testable hypotheses and discoveries.
More information about the application can be found in the wiki.
The official page of the project can be found on the Institut Pasteur website.
Cassandre use the GNU General Public License 3.0