Reactome is a free online database of biological pathways.[1][2][3] It is manually curated and authored by PhD-level biologists, in collaboration with Reactome editorial staff. The content is cross-referenced to many bioinformatics databases. The rationale behind Reactome is to visually represent biological pathways in full mechanistic detail, while making the source data available in a computationally accessible format.
Reactome is maintained by an international multidisciplinary team from OICR, OHSU, EMBL-EBI and NYULMC, with expertise in pathway curation and annotation, software development, and training and outreach, dedicated to providing the research community with openly accessible biological pathway knowledge. The Reactome project is led by Lincoln Stein (OICR). Peter D'Eustachio (NYULMC), Henning Hermjakob (EMBL-EBI), Guanming Wu (OHSU).[citation needed]
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Content | |
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Description | Reactome: a database of reactions, pathways and biological processes. |
Contact | |
Primary citation | PMID 37941124 |
Access | |
Data format | BioPAX SBML |
Website | https://reactome.org |
Download URL | https://reactome.org/download-data |
Web service URL | https://reactome.org/ContentService/ |
Miscellaneous | |
License | https://reactome.org/license |
Data release frequency | https://reactome.org/about/release-calendar |
The website can be used to browse pathways and submit data to a suite of data analysis tools. The underlying data is fully downloadable in a number of standard formats including PDF, SBML, Neo4j GraphDB, MySQL, PSI-MITAB, and BioPAX. Pathway diagrams use a Process Description (PD) Systems Biology Graphical Notation (SBGN)-based style.
The core unit of the Reactome data model is the reaction. Entities (nucleic acids, proteins, complexes and small molecules) participating in reactions form a network of biological interactions and are grouped into pathways.
The pathways represented in Reactome are species-specific, with each pathway step supported by literature citations that contain an experimental verification of the process represented. If no experimental verification using human reagents exists, pathways may contain steps manually inferred from non-human experimental details, but only if an expert biologist, named as Author of the pathway, and a second biologist, names as Reviewer, agree that this is a valid inference to make. The human pathways are used to computationally generate by an orthology-based process derived pathways in other organisms.
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