| Literature DB >> 25304126 |
Jesse R Walsh1,2, Taner Z Sen3,4,5, Julie A Dickerson6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: BioCyc databases are an important resource for information on biological pathways and genomic data. Such databases represent the accumulation of biological data, some of which has been manually curated from literature. An essential feature of these databases is the continuing data integration as new knowledge is discovered. As functional annotations are improved, scalable methods are needed for curators to manage annotations without detailed knowledge of the specific design of the BioCyc database.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25304126 PMCID: PMC4203924 DOI: 10.1186/s12918-014-0115-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Syst Biol ISSN: 1752-0509
Figure 1Screenshot of pathway tools protein editor. Editing database objects through the Pathway Tools software editors is done by entering information into forms which describe information specific to the type of object being edited.
Figure 2Structure of Frames in a PGDB. A) Frames describe objects in the database. Slots contain information about the frame object, and annotations contain meta-information about slot information. B) a protein is represented by a frame in the database. Examples of slots which describe the protein include the protein name, molecular weight, and GO-Term assignments. Annotations of the GO term information include citations, evidence codes, and information on the person who curated this GO term assignment.
Figure 3Import process diagram. Synonym based search automatically occurs if import file does not contain Frame IDs. Only unique matches to frame IDs are allowed in order to prevent ambiguity in the import process.
Figure 4CycTools import screen. CycTools provides a multi-step process for importing user data. Several options are available for users to interact with existing data. Users can also specify an author or organization to assign credit for the revision of a database frame object.
Figure 5GO term annotation import into CornCyc. GO term annotations obtained from MaizeCyc are imported into CornCyc. User provided gene model identifiers are resolved to database frame IDs before import.