PathVisio

PathVisio is a free open-source pathway analysis and drawing software. It allows drawing, editing, and analyzing biological pathways. Visualization of ones experimental data on the pathways for finding relevant pathways that are over-represented in your data set is possible.[1][2][3]

PathVisio
Initial release2008
Stable release
3.3.0 / January 28, 2018
Repository
Written inJava
Operating systemAny (Java-based)
TypePathways editing, analysis, visualization
LicenseApache 2.0
Websitewww.pathvisio.org

PathVisio provides a basic set of features for pathway drawing, analysis and visualization.[4][5] Additional features are available as plugins.

History

PathVisio was created primarily at Maastricht University and Gladstone Institutes.[6] The software is developed in Java and it's also used as part of the WikiPathways framework as an applet.[7] Starting from version 3.0 (released in 2012) plugins are OSGi compliant and a plugin directory, describing them, was developed. In 2015 version 3.2 was released. This was the first signed version with a certificate issued by a certification authority. Many of the running issues introduced by java 1.7 and 1.8 with the new security rules were solved. Since 2013 a javascript version (PVJS) is being developed to replace the applet. From 2015 it also allows small edits and in the future it will be a full editor.

Features

gollark: Well, brains are good at... brain things... but terrible at computer things, like doing simple operations very fast.
gollark: Why use TI-BASIC when you can useLUA BYTECODE?
gollark: Why use COBOL when you can useASSEMBLY?
gollark: Why use Java when you can useRUST?
gollark: Yes, yes it is.

References

  1. "What is PathVisio?". Retrieved 19 September 2013.
  2. van Iersel, Martijn P; Kelder, Thomas; Pico, Alexander R; Hanspers, Kristina; Coort, Susan; Conklin, Bruce R; Evelo, Chris (2008). "Presenting and exploring biological pathways with PathVisio". BMC Bioinformatics. 9 (1): 399. doi:10.1186/1471-2105-9-399. ISSN 1471-2105. PMC 2569944. PMID 18817533.
  3. Kutmon, Martina; van Iersel, Martijn P.; Bohler, Anwesha; Kelder, Thomas; Nunes, Nuno; Pico, Alexander R.; Evelo, Chris T.; Murphy, Robert F. (23 February 2015). "PathVisio 3: An Extendable Pathway Analysis Toolbox". PLOS Computational Biology. 11 (2): e1004085. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004085. PMC 4338111.
  4. Jaiswal, Pankaj; Usadel, Björn (2016). "Chapter 4: Plant Pathway Databases". Plant Bioinformatics. Springer. pp. 71–87. ISBN 978-1-4939-3166-8.
  5. Habermann, Bianca; Villaveces, Jose; Koti, Prasanna (June 2015). "Tools for visualization and analysis of molecular networks, pathways, and -omics data". Advances and Applications in Bioinformatics and Chemistry: 11. doi:10.2147/AABC.S63534. PMC 4461095.
  6. "About/Core development team". Retrieved 10 February 2014.
  7. Pico, AR; Kelder T; van Iersel MP; Hanspers K; Conklin BR; et al. (22 July 2008). "WikiPathways: Pathway Editing for the People". PLoS Biology. 6 (7): e184. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.0060184. PMC 2475545. PMID 18651794. Retrieved 19 September 2013.
  8. "Tutorial 1: Drawing and annotating pathways in PathVisio".
  9. "Tutorial 2: Analyzing experimental data in PathVisio (data import, visualization and statistics)".
  10. Kutmon, Martina; Lotia, Samad; Evelo, Chris T; Pico, Alexander R (2014). "WikiPathways App for Cytoscape: Making biological pathways amenable to network analysis and visualization". F1000Research. doi:10.12688/f1000research.4254.1. ISSN 2046-1402. PMC 4168754.
  11. Bohler, Anwesha; Eijssen, Lars M T; van Iersel, Martijn P; Leemans, Christ; Willighagen, Egon L; Kutmon, Martina; Jaillard, Magali; Evelo, Chris T (2015). "Automatically visualise and analyse data on pathways using PathVisioRPC from any programming environment". BMC Bioinformatics. 16. doi:10.1186/s12859-015-0708-8. PMC 4546821. PMID 26298294.
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