A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
Deciphering cancer genomes with GenomeSpy : a grammar-based visualization toolkit
Authors: Lavikka, Kari; Oikkonen, Jaana; Li, Yilin; Muranen, Taru; Micoli, Giulia; Marchi, Giovanni; Lahtinen, Alexandra; Huhtinen, Kaisa; Lehtonen, Rainer; Hietanen, Sakari; Hynninen, Johanna; Virtanen, Anni; Hautaniemi, Sampsa
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication year: 2024
Journal: GigaScience
Journal name in source: GigaScience
Journal acronym: Gigascience
Article number: giae040
Volume: 13
eISSN: 2047-217X
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/gigascience/giae040
Web address : https://academic.oup.com/gigascience/article/doi/10.1093/gigascience/giae040/7727441
Self-archived copy’s web address: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/457443238
Background: Visualization is an indispensable facet of genomic data analysis. Despite the abundance of specialized visualization tools, there remains a distinct need for tailored solutions. However, their implementation typically requires extensive programming expertise from bioinformaticians and software developers, especially when building interactive applications. Toolkits based on visualization grammars offer a more accessible, declarative way to author new visualizations. Yet, current grammar-based solutions fall short in adequately supporting the interactive analysis of large datasets with extensive sample collections, a pivotal task often encountered in cancer research.
Findings: We present GenomeSpy, a grammar-based toolkit for authoring tailored, interactive visualizations for genomic data analysis. By using combinatorial building blocks and a declarative language, users can implement new visualization designs easily and embed them in web pages or end-user-oriented applications. A distinctive element of GenomeSpy's architecture is its effective use of the graphics processing unit in all rendering, enabling a high frame rate and smoothly animated interactions, such as navigation within a genome. We demonstrate the utility of GenomeSpy by characterizing the genomic landscape of 753 ovarian cancer samples from patients in the DECIDER clinical trial. Our results expand the understanding of the genomic architecture in ovarian cancer, particularly the diversity of chromosomal instability.
Conclusions: GenomeSpy is a visualization toolkit applicable to a wide range of tasks pertinent to genome analysis. It offers high flexibility and exceptional performance in interactive analysis. The toolkit is open source with an MIT license, implemented in JavaScript, and available at https://genomespy.app/.
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Funding information in the publication:
The authors acknowledge CSC-IT Center for Science, Finland, for computational resources. ChatGPT [87] and Grammarly [88] were used to improve the grammar, vocabulary, and the flow of the text written by the authors. Zenodo includes queries and output by Chat GPT3.5 and GPT4 to improve drafts of the manuscript [91]. K.L. acknowledges the Biomedicum Helsinki Foundation for a personal research grant.