| Literature DB >> 26047146 |
Kumar Saurabh Singh1, Dominique Thual2, Roberto Spurio3, Nicola Cannata4.
Abstract
One of the most crucial characteristics of day-to-day laboratory information management is the collection, storage and retrieval of information about research subjects and environmental or biomedical samples. An efficient link between sample data and experimental results is absolutely important for the successful outcome of a collaborative project. Currently available software solutions are largely limited to large scale, expensive commercial Laboratory Information Management Systems (LIMS). Acquiring such LIMS indeed can bring laboratory information management to a higher level, but most of the times this requires a sufficient investment of money, time and technical efforts. There is a clear need for a light weighted open source system which can easily be managed on local servers and handled by individual researchers. Here we present a software named SaDA for storing, retrieving and analyzing data originated from microorganism monitoring experiments. SaDA is fully integrated in the management of environmental samples, oligonucleotide sequences, microarray data and the subsequent downstream analysis procedures. It is simple and generic software, and can be extended and customized for various environmental and biomedical studies.Entities:
Keywords: LIMS; data management; ecological assessment; environmental studies; microarrays; open source system; software
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26047146 PMCID: PMC4483705 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph120606352
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1SaDA architecture: A multilayer architecture, comprising of layer 1 for data upload, processing and retrieval and a RDBMS storage layer with data access control, metadata storage for fast data retrieval. SaDA, in addition, has an external component for third party tools and libraries.
Figure 2Display of Sampling Sites related data within SaDA.
Figure 3(A) An image showing Microarray Experiments module. The display includes a unique microarray experiment and a list of oligonucleotides used in this particular microarray experiment; (B) Display of saved microarray experiments.