Bystro: rapid online variant annotation and natural-language filtering at whole-genome scale
By
Alex V. Kotlar,
Cristina E. Trevino,
Michael E. Zwick,
David J. Cutler,
Thomas S. Wingo
Posted 06 Jun 2017
bioRxiv DOI: 10.1101/146514
(published DOI: 10.1186/s13059-018-1387-3)
Accurately selecting relevant alleles in large sequencing experiments remains technically challenging. Bystro (https://bystro.io/) is the first online, cloud-based application that makes variant annotation and filtering accessible to all researchers for terabyte-sized whole-genome experiments containing thousands of samples. Its key innovation is a general-purpose, natural-language search engine that enables users to identify and export alleles and samples of interest in milliseconds. The search engine dramatically simplifies complex filtering tasks that previously required programming experience or specialty command-line programs. Critically, Bystro's annotation and filtering capabilities are orders of magnitude faster than previous solutions, saving weeks of processing time for large experiments.
Download data
- Downloaded 1,052 times
- Download rankings, all-time:
- Site-wide: 37,080
- In bioinformatics: 3,903
- Year to date:
- Site-wide: 143,196
- Since beginning of last month:
- Site-wide: 143,205
Altmetric data
Downloads over time
Distribution of downloads per paper, site-wide
PanLingua
News
- 27 Nov 2020: The website and API now include results pulled from medRxiv as well as bioRxiv.
- 18 Dec 2019: We're pleased to announce PanLingua, a new tool that enables you to search for machine-translated bioRxiv preprints using more than 100 different languages.
- 21 May 2019: PLOS Biology has published a community page about Rxivist.org and its design.
- 10 May 2019: The paper analyzing the Rxivist dataset has been published at eLife.
- 1 Mar 2019: We now have summary statistics about bioRxiv downloads and submissions.
- 8 Feb 2019: Data from Altmetric is now available on the Rxivist details page for every preprint. Look for the "donut" under the download metrics.
- 30 Jan 2019: preLights has featured the Rxivist preprint and written about our findings.
- 22 Jan 2019: Nature just published an article about Rxivist and our data.
- 13 Jan 2019: The Rxivist preprint is live!