Systems Biology Graphical Notation: Process Description language Level 1 Version 2.0

Adrien Rougny(The Open University of Japan), Vasundra Touré(Norwegian University of Science and Technology), Stuart Moodie, Irina Balaur(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Tobias Czauderna(Monash University), Hanna Borlinghaus(University of Konstanz), Uğur Doğrusöz(Bilkent University), Alexander Mazein(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Andreas Dräger(German Center for Infection Research), Michael L. Blinov(UConn Health), Alice Villéger, Robin Haw(Ontario Institute for Cancer Research), Emek Demir(Oregon Health & Science University), Huaiyu Mi(University of Southern California), Anatoly Sorokin(Institute of Cell Biophysics), Falk Schreiber(University of Konstanz), Augustin Luna(Harvard University)
Berichte aus der medizinischen Informatik und Bioinformatik/Journal of integrative bioinformatics
June 13, 2019
Cited by 65Open Access
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Abstract

The Systems Biology Graphical Notation (SBGN) is an international community effort that aims to standardise the visualisation of pathways and networks for readers with diverse scientific backgrounds as well as to support an efficient and accurate exchange of biological knowledge between disparate research communities, industry, and other players in systems biology. SBGN comprises the three languages Entity Relationship, Activity Flow, and Process Description (PD) to cover biological and biochemical systems at distinct levels of detail. PD is closest to metabolic and regulatory pathways found in biological literature and textbooks. Its well-defined semantics offer a superior precision in expressing biological knowledge. PD represents mechanistic and temporal dependencies of biological interactions and transformations as a graph. Its different types of nodes include entity pools (e.g. metabolites, proteins, genes and complexes) and processes (e.g. reactions, associations and influences). The edges describe relationships between the nodes (e.g. consumption, production, stimulation and inhibition). This document details Level 1 Version 2.0 of the PD specification, including several improvements, in particular: 1) the addition of the equivalence operator, subunit, and annotation glyphs, 2) modification to the usage of submaps, and 3) updates to clarify the use of various glyphs (i.e. multimer, empty set, and state variable).


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