The MetaCyc database of metabolic pathways and enzymes and the BioCyc collection of pathway/genome databases

Rachel R Caspi(Cornell University), Tomer Altman(SRI International), Kate Dreher(SRI International), CA Fulcher(Cornell University), Pallavi Subhraveti(Department of Plant Biology), Ingrid M. Keseler(SRI International), A Kothari(Cornell University), Markus Krummenacker(Cornell University), Mario Latendresse(SRI International), Lukas A. Mueller(SRI International), Quang Ong(Department of Plant Biology), Suzanne Paley(Cornell University), Anuradha Pujar(Cornell University), Alexander G. Shearer(Department of Plant Biology), Michael Travers(SRI International), Deepika Weerasinghe(Department of Plant Biology), P. Zhang(Department of Plant Biology), Peter D. Karp(SRI International)
Nucleic Acids Research
November 18, 2011
Cited by 606Open Access
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Abstract

The MetaCyc database (http://metacyc.org/) provides a comprehensive and freely accessible resource for metabolic pathways and enzymes from all domains of life. The pathways in MetaCyc are experimentally determined, small-molecule metabolic pathways and are curated from the primary scientific literature. MetaCyc contains more than 1800 pathways derived from more than 30,000 publications, and is the largest curated collection of metabolic pathways currently available. Most reactions in MetaCyc pathways are linked to one or more well-characterized enzymes, and both pathways and enzymes are annotated with reviews, evidence codes and literature citations. BioCyc (http://biocyc.org/) is a collection of more than 1700 organism-specific Pathway/Genome Databases (PGDBs). Each BioCyc PGDB contains the full genome and predicted metabolic network of one organism. The network, which is predicted by the Pathway Tools software using MetaCyc as a reference database, consists of metabolites, enzymes, reactions and metabolic pathways. BioCyc PGDBs contain additional features, including predicted operons, transport systems and pathway-hole fillers. The BioCyc website and Pathway Tools software offer many tools for querying and analysis of PGDBs, including Omics Viewers and comparative analysis. New developments include a zoomable web interface for diagrams; flux-balance analysis model generation from PGDBs; web services; and a new tool called Web Groups.


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