Reactome: a database of reactions, pathways and biological processes

Reactome (http://www.reactome.org) is a collaboration among groups at the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, New York University School of Medicine and The European Bioinformatics Institute, to develop an open source curated bioinformatics database of human pathway...

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Published inNucleic acids research Vol. 39; no. Database issue; pp. D691 - D697
Main Authors Croft, David, O'Kelly, Gavin, Wu, Guanming, Haw, Robin, Gillespie, Marc, Matthews, Lisa, Caudy, Michael, Garapati, Phani, Gopinath, Gopal, Jassal, Bijay, Jupe, Steven, Kalatskaya, Irina, Mahajan, Shahana, May, Bruce, Ndegwa, Nelson, Schmidt, Esther, Shamovsky, Veronica, Yung, Christina, Birney, Ewan, Hermjakob, Henning, D'Eustachio, Peter, Stein, Lincoln
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Oxford University Press 01.01.2011
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Summary:Reactome (http://www.reactome.org) is a collaboration among groups at the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, New York University School of Medicine and The European Bioinformatics Institute, to develop an open source curated bioinformatics database of human pathways and reactions. Recently, we developed a new web site with improved tools for pathway browsing and data analysis. The Pathway Browser is an Systems Biology Graphical Notation (SBGN)-based visualization system that supports zooming, scrolling and event highlighting. It exploits PSIQUIC web services to overlay our curated pathways with molecular interaction data from the Reactome Functional Interaction Network and external interaction databases such as IntAct, BioGRID, ChEMBL, iRefIndex, MINT and STRING. Our Pathway and Expression Analysis tools enable ID mapping, pathway assignment and overrepresentation analysis of user-supplied data sets. To support pathway annotation and analysis in other species, we continue to make orthology-based inferences of pathways in non-human species, applying Ensembl Compara to identify orthologs of curated human proteins in each of 20 other species. The resulting inferred pathway sets can be browsed and analyzed with our Species Comparison tool. Collaborations are also underway to create manually curated data sets on the Reactome framework for chicken, Drosophila and rice.
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The authors wish it to be known that, in their opinion, the first three authors should be regarded as joint First Authors.
ISSN:0305-1048
1362-4962
1362-4962
DOI:10.1093/nar/gkq1018