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Joint Press Release
European Bioinformatics Institute
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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International
Consortium Launches New Web-Based Tool:
Reactome Provides
Map of Human Biological Pathways
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New York/Hinxton, June 2, 2004 – A
partnership between Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) and
the European
Molecular Biology Laboratory’s European Bioinformatics
Institute (EBI) has publicly released Reactome, a curated database
of biological processes in humans. This database, available at
www.reactome.org, is a dual-purpose project that can be used
by general biologists as an online textbook of biology, or by
bioinformaticians to make discoveries about biological pathways.
Now that the human genome is essentially complete and we are
making daily strides in cataloguing information about the other
ingredients of a cell such as proteins, RNA molecules and metabolites,
scientists have begun to focus on how these components interact
in living systems, an emerging field called ‘systems
biology’. Reactome puts the ‘parts
lists’ together to build pathways – the functional
units that orchestrate the different activities of a cell.
The basic information in Reactome is provided by bench biologists
who are experts on a particular pathway. The information is then
managed by groups of curators at CSHL and EBI, peer-reviewed
by other researchers and published on the web. It covers biological
pathways ranging from the basic processes of metabolism to complex
regulatory pathways such as hormonal signalling. While Reactome
is targeted at human
pathways, it also includes many individual biochemical reactions
from non-human systems such as rat, mouse, pufferfish and zebrafish.
This makes the database relevant to the many researchers who
work on model organisms. All the information in Reactome is backed
up by its provenance: either a literature citation or an electronic
inference based on sequence similarity.
“Traditionally, researchers have had to use different databases
to find information on the various types of building blocks in
pathways,” explains CSHL’s Lincoln
Stein. “Reactome is an important breakthrough because it
allows researchers to focus on entire processes.” The EBI’s
Ewan Birney continues: “Scientists are increasingly focused
on the bigger picture; Reactome allows them to see it right away;
it’s
like having a digital camera instead of waiting three weeks to
get your out-of-focus photos developed.”
Reactome supersedes an earlier project called The
Genome Knowledgebase and incorporates all the information previously
available in its predecessor. Reactome sports a radically redesigned
user interface in which the entire set of human pathways known
to the database is represented as a series of constellations
in a ‘starry sky’. The starry
sky can be used to navigate through the universe of human reactions
and is invaluable to visualize connections between pathways,
some of which will be surprising to biologists who
are not familiar with pathways outside their domain of research.
Also new in Reactome are cross-references to the online databases
PubMed, UniProt, LocusLink, Ensembl and the Gene Ontology.
Since the first release of The Genome
Knowledgebase a year ago, this project has covered the important
topics of cell division and its checkpoints, DNA repair, DNA
replication, metabolism of sugars, amino acids, lipids, and nucleotides,
the tricarboxylic acid cycle, the central dogma comprising the
transcription of coding genes, processing of mRNA and translation
to proteins. Future releases, which occur at roughly quarterly
intervals, will include programmed cell death, transmission of
nerve impulses, blood clotting and blood cell
development. Reactome contains information concerning more than
1000 human proteins in the SwissProt section of the UniProt protein
knowlegebase, a substantial proportion of the total set of well-characterized
proteins.
Reactome is an NIH-funded collaboration between
Dr Lincoln Stein’s laboratory at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
in New York and the laboratory of Dr. Ewan Birney of the European
Bioinformatics Institute, part of the European Molecular Biology
Laboratory, in Hinxton, UK. The data in Reactome is free and
can be freely re-distributed by both the author and the users,
and Reactome software is open source. Author contributions to
Reactome are citable, and the worldwide biology community is
encouraged to link to its database, www.reactome.org.
Reactome is supported by the National Human Genome Research Institute
(NHGRI) and the Cell Migration Consortium (CMC), a European Union
Project Grant and funding from the EBI Industry Programme.
Press Contacts:
Cath Brooksbank PhD, EMBL-EBI Scientific Outreach Officer
Wellcome Trust Genome Campus, Hinxton, Cambridge CB10 1SD, UK, Tel: +44 (0)1223
492525, www.ebi.ac.uk, cath@ebi.ac.uk |
Trista Dawson, EMBL Press Officer
Meyerhofstrasse 1, 69117 Heidelberg, Germany, Tel: +49 6221 387 452, www.embl.de,
dawson@embl.de |
Jeff Picarello, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory - Director
of Public Affairs
1 Bungtown Road, Cold Spring Harbor, New York 11724-2213, USA, Tel: 001 516 367
8486, www.cshl.edu. picarell@cshl.edu |
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17 EMBL Member States: Austria,
Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland,
Israel, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden,
Switzerland
and the United Kingdom.
About Cold Spring Harbor:
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory is a private, non-profit basic
research and educational institution. Under the leadership
of Dr. Bruce
Stillman, a member of the National Academy of Sciences and a
Fellow of the
Royal Society (London), some 330 scientists conduct groundbreaking
research in cancer, neurobiology, plant genetics and bioinformatics.
About the EBI:
The European Bioinformatics Institute (EBI) is part of the European
Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) and is located on the Wellcome
Trust Genome Campus in Hinxton near Cambridge (UK). The EBI grew
out of EMBL's pioneering work in providing public biological
databases to the research community. It hosts some of the world's
most important
collections of biological data, including DNA sequences (EMBL-Bank),
protein sequences (UniProt), animal genomes (Ensembl), three-dimensional
structures (the Macromolecular Structure Database) and data from
microarray experiments (ArrayExpress). The EBI hosts several
research groups and its scientists continually develop new tools
for the biocomputing community.
About EMBL:
The European Molecular Biology Laboratory is a basic research
institute funded by public research monies from 17 member states
(Austria,
Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland,
Israel, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden,
Switzerland
and the United Kingdom). Research at EMBL is conducted by approximately
80 independent groups covering the spectrum of molecular biology.
The Laboratory has five units: the main Laboratory in Heidelberg,
and Outstations in Hinxton (the European Bioinformatics Institute),
Grenoble, Hamburg, and Monterotondo near Rome. The cornerstones
of EMBL's mission are: to perform basic research in molecular
biology; to train scientists,
students and visitors at all levels; to offer vital services
to scientists in the member states; and to develop new instruments
and methods in the life sciences. EMBL's international PhD Programme
has a student body of about 170. The Laboratory also sponsors
an
active Science and Society programme. Visitors from the press
and public are welcome.
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