Uniformly curated signaling pathways reveal tissue-specific cross-talks and support drug target discovery

Motivation: Signaling pathways control a large variety of cellular processes. However, currently, even within the same database signaling pathways are often curated at different levels of detail. This makes comparative and cross-talk analyses difficult. Results: We present SignaLink, a database cont...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2010-08
Hauptverfasser: Korcsmaros, Tamas, Farkas, Illes J, Szalay, Maté S, Rovo, Petra, Fazekas, David, Spiro, Zoltan, Bode, Csaba, Lenti, Katalin, Vellai, Tibor, Csermely, Peter
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Motivation: Signaling pathways control a large variety of cellular processes. However, currently, even within the same database signaling pathways are often curated at different levels of detail. This makes comparative and cross-talk analyses difficult. Results: We present SignaLink, a database containing 8 major signaling pathways from Caenorhabditis elegans, Drosophila melanogaster, and humans. Based on 170 review and approx. 800 research articles, we have compiled pathways with semi-automatic searches and uniform, well-documented curation rules. We found that in humans any two of the 8 pathways can cross-talk. We quantified the possible tissue- and cancer-specific activity of cross-talks and found pathway-specific expression profiles. In addition, we identified 327 proteins relevant for drug target discovery. Conclusions: We provide a novel resource for comparative and cross-talk analyses of signaling pathways. The identified multi-pathway and tissue-specific cross-talks contribute to the understanding of the signaling complexity in health and disease and underscore its importance in network-based drug target selection. Availability: http://SignaLink.org
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.1008.4025