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A database of biological pathways and processes (borrowed from a presentation created by Steve Jupe ). http://biocyc.org/ARA/new-image?type=PATHWAY&object=PWY-695. http://biocyc.org/ARA/NEW-IMAGE?type=REACTION-IN-PATHWAY&object=RXN-698. What about these?
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A database of biological pathways and processes(borrowed from a presentationcreated by Steve Jupe)
http://biocyc.org/ARA/NEW-IMAGE?type=REACTION-IN-PATHWAY&object=RXN-698http://biocyc.org/ARA/NEW-IMAGE?type=REACTION-IN-PATHWAY&object=RXN-698
What about these? • protein-protein and protein-small molecule interactions (noncovalent and covalent) • effects of location within cell • and … Cutler et al. (2010) “Abscisic acid: emergence of a core signaling network” Annu Rev Plant Biol 61:651–79
… and integration of signaling and regulation with metabolism Seo & Koshiba (2002) “Complex regulation of ABA biosynthesis in plants” Trends Plant Sci 7:41-8 Nambara & Marion-Poll (2005) “Abscisic acid biosynthesis & catabolism” Annu Rev Plant Biol 56:165-85
Some of the regulatory links that can potentially be annotated Seo & Koshiba (2002) “Complex regulation of ABA biosynthesis in plants” Trends Plant Sci 7:41-8
Reactome is • - reductionist. All of biology can be represented as events that convert input physical entities into output physical entities. • - a generic parts list. Tissue and state specificity of events are not captured. • - qualitative. Kinetic parameters and data are not captured. • - species-centric. Experiments may use reagents from diverse sources, but most biological processes take place in single species, and the focus here will be on rice biological processes. • manually curated. Events are annotated by expert curators, and linked to published data. • open source. All data and software are freely downloadable and reusable.
Data model in a nutshell Pathway Pathway Reaction Reaction Regulation Input 1 Output 1 Reaction Input 2 Output 2 CatalystActivity
A geometrical compartment set for locating molecules in human cells Incomplete! What needs to be added or changed to locate molecules in plant cells?
BINDING DEGRADATION DISSOCIATION DEPHOSPHORYLATION PHOSPHORYLATION CLASSIC BIOCHEMICAL TRANSPORT Why ‘Reactome’? • Reactions are the ‘units’ of a pathway (network) • Capture events and changes of state found in biology
Reactome Aims • Represent detailed biological pathways composed of ‘biological events’ • Describe every step (interaction or other event) • Provide evidence from literature for every step • Make available free for browsing and download/re-use • Store in a computationally accessible way (support multiple download standards/formats) • Link to external resources and use standard IDs, nomenclature wherever possible
Using model organism data to build pathways – inferred reactions PMID:5555 PMID:6666 Direct evidence LOC:1111 LOC:1112 LOC:1113 LOC:1114 rice PMID:7777 UniProt:P11111 Arabidopsis Indirect evidence (inference) PMID:8888 UniProt:P22222 tobacco How do we accommodate rice subspecies (strains)? How do we link between fully curated databases (Arabidopsis and rice)?
Reaction Example 2: Transport REACT_1338.3
Other Reaction Types Dimerization Phosphorylation
Reactions Connect into Pathways CATALYST CATALYST CATALYST INPUT OUTPUT INPUT OUTPUT OUTPUT INPUT
Data Expansion - Link-outs From Reactome GO Molecular Function Compartment Biological process ChEBI – small molecules UniProt – proteins PubMed references – literature evidence for events Sequence dbs – Ensembl, OMIM, Entrez Gene, RefSeq, HapMap, UCSC, KEGG Gene