Literature DB >> 28708831

biochem4j: Integrated and extensible biochemical knowledge through graph databases.

Neil Swainston1, Riza Batista-Navarro2, Pablo Carbonell1, Paul D Dobson2, Mark Dunstan1, Adrian J Jervis1, Maria Vinaixa1, Alan R Williams2, Sophia Ananiadou2, Jean-Loup Faulon1,3,4, Pedro Mendes5, Douglas B Kell1,4, Nigel S Scrutton1,4, Rainer Breitling1,4.   

Abstract

Biologists and biochemists have at their disposal a number of excellent, publicly available data resources such as UniProt, KEGG, and NCBI Taxonomy, which catalogue biological entities. Despite the usefulness of these resources, they remain fundamentally unconnected. While links may appear between entries across these databases, users are typically only able to follow such links by manual browsing or through specialised workflows. Although many of the resources provide web-service interfaces for computational access, performing federated queries across databases remains a non-trivial but essential activity in interdisciplinary systems and synthetic biology programmes. What is needed are integrated repositories to catalogue both biological entities and-crucially-the relationships between them. Such a resource should be extensible, such that newly discovered relationships-for example, those between novel, synthetic enzymes and non-natural products-can be added over time. With the introduction of graph databases, the barrier to the rapid generation, extension and querying of such a resource has been lowered considerably. With a particular focus on metabolic engineering as an illustrative application domain, biochem4j, freely available at http://biochem4j.org, is introduced to provide an integrated, queryable database that warehouses chemical, reaction, enzyme and taxonomic data from a range of reliable resources. The biochem4j framework establishes a starting point for the flexible integration and exploitation of an ever-wider range of biological data sources, from public databases to laboratory-specific experimental datasets, for the benefit of systems biologists, biosystems engineers and the wider community of molecular biologists and biological chemists.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28708831      PMCID: PMC5510799          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0179130

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


  45 in total

1.  ChemIDplus-super source for chemical and drug information.

Authors:  Patricia Tomasulo
Journal:  Med Ref Serv Q       Date:  2002

2.  KNApSAcK family databases: integrated metabolite-plant species databases for multifaceted plant research.

Authors:  Farit Mochamad Afendi; Taketo Okada; Mami Yamazaki; Aki Hirai-Morita; Yukiko Nakamura; Kensuke Nakamura; Shun Ikeda; Hiroki Takahashi; Md Altaf-Ul-Amin; Latifah K Darusman; Kazuki Saito; Shigehiko Kanaya
Journal:  Plant Cell Physiol       Date:  2011-11-28       Impact factor: 4.927

3.  Tavaxy: integrating Taverna and Galaxy workflows with cloud computing support.

Authors:  Mohamed Abouelhoda; Shadi Alaa Issa; Moustafa Ghanem
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2012-05-04       Impact factor: 3.169

4.  UniPathway: a resource for the exploration and annotation of metabolic pathways.

Authors:  Anne Morgat; Eric Coissac; Elisabeth Coudert; Kristian B Axelsen; Guillaume Keller; Amos Bairoch; Alan Bridge; Lydie Bougueleret; Ioannis Xenarios; Alain Viari
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2011-11-18       Impact factor: 16.971

5.  DrugBank: a comprehensive resource for in silico drug discovery and exploration.

Authors:  David S Wishart; Craig Knox; An Chi Guo; Savita Shrivastava; Murtaza Hassanali; Paul Stothard; Zhan Chang; Jennifer Woolsey
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2006-01-01       Impact factor: 16.971

6.  Combining computational models, semantic annotations and simulation experiments in a graph database.

Authors:  Ron Henkel; Olaf Wolkenhauer; Dagmar Waltemath
Journal:  Database (Oxford)       Date:  2015-03-08       Impact factor: 3.451

7.  InChI, the IUPAC International Chemical Identifier.

Authors:  Stephen R Heller; Alan McNaught; Igor Pletnev; Stephen Stein; Dmitrii Tchekhovskoi
Journal:  J Cheminform       Date:  2015-05-30       Impact factor: 5.514

8.  Recon 2.2: from reconstruction to model of human metabolism.

Authors:  Neil Swainston; Kieran Smallbone; Hooman Hefzi; Paul D Dobson; Judy Brewer; Michael Hanscho; Daniel C Zielinski; Kok Siong Ang; Natalie J Gardiner; Jahir M Gutierrez; Sarantos Kyriakopoulos; Meiyappan Lakshmanan; Shangzhong Li; Joanne K Liu; Veronica S Martínez; Camila A Orellana; Lake-Ee Quek; Alex Thomas; Juergen Zanghellini; Nicole Borth; Dong-Yup Lee; Lars K Nielsen; Douglas B Kell; Nathan E Lewis; Pedro Mendes
Journal:  Metabolomics       Date:  2016-06-07       Impact factor: 4.290

9.  The Reactome pathway knowledgebase.

Authors:  David Croft; Antonio Fabregat Mundo; Robin Haw; Marija Milacic; Joel Weiser; Guanming Wu; Michael Caudy; Phani Garapati; Marc Gillespie; Maulik R Kamdar; Bijay Jassal; Steven Jupe; Lisa Matthews; Bruce May; Stanislav Palatnik; Karen Rothfels; Veronica Shamovsky; Heeyeon Song; Mark Williams; Ewan Birney; Henning Hermjakob; Lincoln Stein; Peter D'Eustachio
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2013-11-15       Impact factor: 16.971

10.  MetaNetX/MNXref--reconciliation of metabolites and biochemical reactions to bring together genome-scale metabolic networks.

Authors:  Sébastien Moretti; Olivier Martin; T Van Du Tran; Alan Bridge; Anne Morgat; Marco Pagni
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2015-11-02       Impact factor: 16.971

View more
  6 in total

1.  GeneORator: An Efficient Method for the Systematic Mutagenesis of Entire Genes.

Authors:  Lucy Green; Nigel S Scrutton; Andrew Currin
Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2022

2.  An automated Design-Build-Test-Learn pipeline for enhanced microbial production of fine chemicals.

Authors:  Pablo Carbonell; Adrian J Jervis; Christopher J Robinson; Cunyu Yan; Mark Dunstan; Neil Swainston; Maria Vinaixa; Katherine A Hollywood; Andrew Currin; Nicholas J W Rattray; Sandra Taylor; Reynard Spiess; Rehana Sung; Alan R Williams; Donal Fellows; Natalie J Stanford; Paul Mulherin; Rosalind Le Feuvre; Perdita Barran; Royston Goodacre; Nicholas J Turner; Carole Goble; George Guoqiang Chen; Douglas B Kell; Jason Micklefield; Rainer Breitling; Eriko Takano; Jean-Loup Faulon; Nigel S Scrutton
Journal:  Commun Biol       Date:  2018-06-08

3.  A strategy for large-scale comparison of evolutionary- and reaction-based classifications of enzyme function.

Authors:  Gemma L Holliday; Shoshana D Brown; David Mischel; Benjamin J Polacco; Patricia C Babbitt
Journal:  Database (Oxford)       Date:  2020-01-01       Impact factor: 3.451

4.  ERMer: a serverless platform for navigating, analyzing, and visualizing Escherichia coli regulatory landscape through graph database.

Authors:  Zhitao Mao; Ruoyu Wang; Haoran Li; Yixin Huang; Qiang Zhang; Xiaoping Liao; Hongwu Ma
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2022-04-30       Impact factor: 19.160

5.  FGDB: a comprehensive graph database of ligand fragments from the Protein Data Bank.

Authors:  Daniele Toti; Gabriele Macari; Enrico Barbierato; Fabio Polticelli
Journal:  Database (Oxford)       Date:  2022-06-27       Impact factor: 4.462

6.  Reactome graph database: Efficient access to complex pathway data.

Authors:  Antonio Fabregat; Florian Korninger; Guilherme Viteri; Konstantinos Sidiropoulos; Pablo Marin-Garcia; Peipei Ping; Guanming Wu; Lincoln Stein; Peter D'Eustachio; Henning Hermjakob
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2018-01-29       Impact factor: 4.475

  6 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.