The STRING database in 2025: protein networks with directionality of regulation

Damian Szklarczyk(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Katerina Nastou(University of Copenhagen), Mikaela Koutrouli(University of Copenhagen), Rebecca Kirsch(University of Copenhagen), Farrokh Mehryary(University of Turku), Radja Hachilif(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Dewei Hu(University of Copenhagen), Matteo Eustachio Peluso(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Qingyao Huang(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Tao Fang(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Nadezhda T. Doncheva(University of Copenhagen), Sampo Pyysalo(University of Turku), Peer Bork(Max Delbrück Center), Lars Juhl Jensen(University of Copenhagen), Christian von Mering(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics)
Nucleic Acids Research
November 18, 2024
Cited by 482Open Access
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Abstract

Proteins cooperate, regulate and bind each other to achieve their functions. Understanding the complex network of their interactions is essential for a systems-level description of cellular processes. The STRING database compiles, scores and integrates protein-protein association information drawn from experimental assays, computational predictions and prior knowledge. Its goal is to create comprehensive and objective global networks that encompass both physical and functional interactions. Additionally, STRING provides supplementary tools such as network clustering and pathway enrichment analysis. The latest version, STRING 12.5, introduces a new 'regulatory network', for which it gathers evidence on the type and directionality of interactions using curated pathway databases and a fine-tuned language model parsing the literature. This update enables users to visualize and access three distinct network types-functional, physical and regulatory-separately, each applicable to distinct research needs. In addition, the pathway enrichment detection functionality has been updated, with better false discovery rate corrections, redundancy filtering and improved visual displays. The resource now also offers improved annotations of clustered networks and provides users with downloadable network embeddings, which facilitate the use of STRING networks in machine learning and allow cross-species transfer of protein information. The STRING database is available online at https://string-db.org/.


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