DAVID-WS: a stateful web service to facilitate gene/protein list analysis

X Jiao, BT Sherman, DW Huang, R Stephens… - …, 2012 - academic.oup.com
X Jiao, BT Sherman, DW Huang, R Stephens, MW Baseler, HC Lane, RA Lempicki
Bioinformatics, 2012academic.oup.com
The database for annotation, visualization and integrated discovery (DAVID), which can be
freely accessed at http://david. abcc. ncifcrf. gov/, is a web-based online bioinformatics
resource that aims to provide tools for the functional interpretation of large lists of
genes/proteins. It has been used by researchers from more than 5000 institutes worldwide,
with a daily submission rate of∼ 1200 gene lists from∼ 400 unique researchers, and has
been cited by more than 6000 scientific publications. However, the current web interface …
Abstract
Summary: The database for annotation, visualization and integrated discovery (DAVID), which can be freely accessed at http://david.abcc.ncifcrf.gov/, is a web-based online bioinformatics resource that aims to provide tools for the functional interpretation of large lists of genes/proteins. It has been used by researchers from more than 5000 institutes worldwide, with a daily submission rate of ∼1200 gene lists from ∼400 unique researchers, and has been cited by more than 6000 scientific publications. However, the current web interface does not support programmatic access to DAVID, and the uniform resource locator (URL)-based application programming interface (API) has a limit on URL size and is stateless in nature as it uses URL request and response messages to communicate with the server, without keeping any state-related details. DAVID-WS (web service) has been developed to automate user tasks by providing stateful web services to access DAVID programmatically without the need for human interactions.
Availability: The web service and sample clients (written in Java, Perl, Python and Matlab) are made freely available under the DAVID License at http://david.abcc.ncifcrf.gov/content.jsp?file=WS.html.
Contact:  xiaoli.jiao@nih.gov; rlempicki@nih.gov
Oxford University Press