Panorama: A Targeted Proteomics Knowledge Base

Vagisha Sharma(University of Washington), Josh Eckels, Greg Taylor, Nicholas Shulman(University of Washington), Andrew B. Stergachis(University of Washington), Shannon Joyner, Ping Yan(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Jeffrey R. Whiteaker(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Goran N. Halusa(Leidos Biomedical Research Inc. (United States)), Birgit Schilling(Buck Institute for Research on Aging), Bradford W. Gibson(Buck Institute for Research on Aging), Christopher M. Colangelo(Yale University), Amanda G. Paulovich(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Steven A. Carr(Broad Institute), Jacob D. Jaffe(Broad Institute), Michael J. MacCoss(University of Washington), Brendan MacLean(University of Washington)
Journal of Proteome Research
August 7, 2014
Cited by 233

Abstract

Panorama is a web application for storing, sharing, analyzing, and reusing targeted assays created and refined with Skyline,1 an increasingly popular Windows client software tool for targeted proteomics experiments. Panorama allows laboratories to store and organize curated results contained in Skyline documents with fine-grained permissions, which facilitates distributed collaboration and secure sharing of published and unpublished data via a web-browser interface. It is fully integrated with the Skyline workflow and supports publishing a document directly to a Panorama server from the Skyline user interface. Panorama captures the complete Skyline document information content in a relational database schema. Curated results published to Panorama can be aggregated and exported as chromatogram libraries. These libraries can be used in Skyline to pick optimal targets in new experiments and to validate peak identification of target peptides. Panorama is open-source and freely available. It is distributed as part of LabKey Server,2 an open source biomedical research data management system. Laboratories and organizations can set up Panorama locally by downloading and installing the software on their own servers. They can also request freely hosted projects on https://panoramaweb.org , a Panorama server maintained by the Department of Genome Sciences at the University of Washington.


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