| Literature DB >> 18840285 |
Jingkai Yu1, Svetlana Pacifico, Guozhen Liu, Russell L Finley.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Charting the interactions among genes and among their protein products is essential for understanding biological systems. A flood of interaction data is emerging from high throughput technologies, computational approaches, and literature mining methods. Quick and efficient access to this data has become a critical issue for biologists. Several excellent multi-organism databases for gene and protein interactions are available, yet most of these have understandable difficulty maintaining comprehensive information for any one organism. No single database, for example, includes all available interactions, integrated gene expression data, and comprehensive and searchable gene information for the important model organism, Drosophila melanogaster. DESCRIPTION: DroID, the Drosophila Interactions Database, is a comprehensive interactions database designed specifically for Drosophila. DroID houses published physical protein interactions, genetic interactions, and computationally predicted interactions, including interologs based on data for other model organisms and humans. All interactions are annotated with original experimental data and source information. DroID can be searched and filtered based on interaction information or a comprehensive set of gene attributes from Flybase. DroID also contains gene expression and expression correlation data that can be searched and used to filter datasets, for example, to focus a study on sub-networks of co-expressed genes. To address the inherent noise in interaction data, DroID employs an updatable confidence scoring system that assigns a score to each physical interaction based on the likelihood that it represents a biologically significant link.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18840285 PMCID: PMC2572628 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-9-461
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Figure 1DroID access interfaces. (A) DroID search page; (B) Interaction search results page from which results can be filtered using gene expression data or confidence scores; (C) Cytoscape plug-in, which queries DroID directly and enables network visualization and analysis within Cytoscape; (D) IM Browser interface with dynamic graphing capabilities. All interfaces can be accessed from .
DroID interaction datasets
| Data set | Number of Interactions | Number of Genes |
| Curagen yeast two-hybrid | 20182 | 6875 |
| Finley yeast two-hybrid | 2915 | 1225 |
| Hybrigenics yeast two-hybrid | 1856 | 1282 |
| Other physical interactions* | 897 | 628 |
| Human interologs | 40548 | 3996 |
| Yeast interologs | 64407 | 2668 |
| Worm interologs | 2383 | 1432 |
| Genetic interactions | 5350 | 1644 |
* Physical interactions that were detected outside the three large-scale yeast two-hybrid screens. The two-hybrid datasets are from references [30] for Curagen, [29] for Finley, and [31] for Hybrigenics.
Overlap between interaction datasets
| Worm | Yeast | Human | Genetic | Other* | Hybrigenics | Curagen | |
| Finley | 14 | 73 | 118 | 15 | 6 | 4 | 48 |
| Curagen | 69 | 168 | 263 | 35 | 48 | 23 | |
| Hybrigenics | 8 | 15 | 54 | 24 | 9 | ||
| Other* | 12 | 52 | 220 | 182 | |||
| Genetic | 8 | 55 | 403 | ||||
| Human | 201 | 4830 | |||||
| Yeast | 137 |
* Physical interactions that were detected outside the three large-scale yeast two-hybrid screens.
Figure 2Expression correlation comparison. Boxplots of average expression correlations of different interaction sets. (A) Comparison between random pairs of genes not known to interact (Random), all physical interactions in DroID (Physical), including interactions detected with Drosophila proteins and those predicted based on human, worm, and yeast physical interactions (Table 1), and genetic interactions (Genetic). (B) Difference of expression correlations between putative conserved and putative non-conserved fly physical interactions. The conserved set includes Drosophila physical interactions that overlap with any of the three sets of predicted physical interactions, while the non-conserved set contains the rest of the physical interactions.
Figure 3Gene expression correlation for interaction data sets in DroID. Boxplots of correlation distributions of different data sets show that all sets of interactions in DroID have higher average expression correlation than the set of random protein pairs. The X-axis represents various sets of interactions in DroID, 'Random' denotes sets of random protein pairs. The Y-axis represents expression correlations.