Comparing classical pathways and modern networks: towards the development of an edge ontology.

TitleComparing classical pathways and modern networks: towards the development of an edge ontology.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2007
AuthorsLu LJ, Sboner A, Huang YJ, Lu HXin, Gianoulis TA, Yip KY, Kim PM, Montelione GT, Gerstein MB
JournalTrends Biochem Sci
Volume32
Issue7
Pagination320-31
Date Published2007 Jul
ISSN0968-0004
KeywordsAnimals, Databases, Factual, Humans, Signal Transduction, Systems Biology
Abstract

Pathways are integral to systems biology. Their classical representation has proven useful but is inconsistent in the meaning assigned to each arrow (or edge) and inadvertently implies the isolation of one pathway from another. Conversely, modern high-throughput (HTP) experiments offer standardized networks that facilitate topological calculations. Combining these perspectives, classical pathways can be embedded within large-scale networks and thus demonstrate the crosstalk between them. As more diverse types of HTP data become available, both perspectives can be effectively merged, embedding pathways simultaneously in multiple networks. However, the original problem still remains - the current edge representation is inadequate to accurately convey all the information in pathways. Therefore, we suggest that a standardized and well-defined edge ontology is necessary and propose a prototype as a starting point for reaching this goal.

DOI10.1016/j.tibs.2007.06.003
Alternate JournalTrends Biochem Sci
PubMed ID17583513
Related Faculty: 
Andrea Sboner, Ph.D.

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