SMPDB 2.0: Big Improvements to the Small Molecule Pathway Database

Timothy Jewison(National Institute for Nanotechnology), Yilu Su(University of Alberta), Fatemeh Miri Disfani(University of Alberta), Yongjie Liang(University of Alberta), Craig Knox(University of Alberta), Adam Maciejewski(University of Alberta), Jenna Poelzer(University of Alberta), Jessica Huynh(University of Alberta), You Zhou(University of Alberta), David Arndt(University of Alberta), Yannick Djoumbou-Feunang(University of Alberta), Yifeng Liu(University of Alberta), Lu Deng(University of Alberta), An Chi Guo(University of Alberta), Beomsoo Han(University of Alberta), Allison Pon(University of Alberta), Michael Wilson(University of Alberta), Shahrzad Rafatnia(University of Alberta), Philip L.‐F. Liu(University of Alberta), David S. Wishart(University of Alberta)
Nucleic Acids Research
November 6, 2013
Cited by 489Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The Small Molecule Pathway Database (SMPDB, http://www.smpdb.ca) is a comprehensive, colorful, fully searchable and highly interactive database for visualizing human metabolic, drug action, drug metabolism, physiological activity and metabolic disease pathways. SMPDB contains >600 pathways with nearly 75% of its pathways not found in any other database. All SMPDB pathway diagrams are extensively hyperlinked and include detailed information on the relevant tissues, organs, organelles, subcellular compartments, protein cofactors, protein locations, metabolite locations, chemical structures and protein quaternary structures. Since its last release in 2010, SMPDB has undergone substantial upgrades and significant expansion. In particular, the total number of pathways in SMPDB has grown by >70%. Additionally, every previously entered pathway has been completely redrawn, standardized, corrected, updated and enhanced with additional molecular or cellular information. Many SMPDB pathways now include transporter proteins as well as much more physiological, tissue, target organ and reaction compartment data. Thanks to the development of a standardized pathway drawing tool (called PathWhiz) all SMPDB pathways are now much more easily drawn and far more rapidly updated. PathWhiz has also allowed all SMPDB pathways to be saved in a BioPAX format. Significant improvements to SMPDB's visualization interface now make the browsing, selection, recoloring and zooming of pathways far easier and far more intuitive. Because of its utility and breadth of coverage, SMPDB is now integrated into several other databases including HMDB and DrugBank.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis