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NetPath
Johns Hopkins University

NetPath is a manually curated resource of human signal transduction pathways. It is a joint effort between Pandey Lab at the Johns Hopkins University and the Institute of Bioinformatics (IOB), Bangalore, India, and is also worked on by other parties.

NetPath hosts 45 signaling pathways, including 10 pathways with a major role in the regulation of immune system and 10 pathways with relevance to regulation of cancer.

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Overview

The 45 pathways contain information pertaining to protein-protein interactions, enzyme-protein substrate reactions which bring about post translational modifications (PTMs) and also a catalogue of genes which are differentially regulated upon activation of specific ligand mediated receptor pathways. The molecules which localises to different cellular organelles due to their PTMs or specific protein-protein interactions which occur downstream of ligand-receptor mediated pathway are available under translocation events. Recently, NetPath has also curated the molecules involved in the transcriptional regulation of genes in the context of immune signaling pathways. The reactions in NetPath are curated by PhD level scientists from experimental evidence available in published research articles. NetPath also contains textual description of its reactions with information on PTMs, dependence of PTMs on various signaling reactions, subcellular location, protein interaction domains or motifs and the cell type or cell line in which reactions are proved. The information in NetPath is linked to their corresponding research articles and are frequently updated. Each pathway is subjected to different level of internal quality checks and peer-review by the pathway experts and authorities.

Development

NetPath was developed using PathBuilder, an open source software application for annotating and developing pathway resources.3 PathBuilder enables annotation of molecular events including protein-protein interactions, enzyme-substrate relationships and protein translocation events via manual or automatic methods. The features of PathBuilder include automatic validation of data formats, built-in modules for visualizing pathways, automated import of data from other pathway resources, export of data in several standard data exchange formats and an application programming interface for retrieving pathway datasets.

Data availability

All 45 pathways are freely downloadable in BioPAX, PSI-MI and SBML formats. BioPAX is an emerging standard for pathway data exchange. The pathways are made available under an adaptive Creative Commons License 2.5 which stipulates that the pathways may be used if adequate credit is given to the authors.

Immune signaling pathways

The following immune signaling pathways are hosted by Netpath:

  • B cell receptor pathway4
  • T cell receptor pathway5
  • Interleukin-1 pathway6
  • Interleukin-2 pathway7
  • Interleukin-3 pathway8
  • Interleukin-4 pathway9
  • Interleukin-5 pathway10
  • Interleukin-6 pathway11
  • Interleukin-7 pathway12
  • Interleukin-9 pathway13

Cancer signaling pathways

The cancer signaling pathways were developed in collaboration with the Computational Biology Center at Memorial Sloan–Kettering Cancer Center and with Bader Lab at the University of Toronto for the "Cancer Cell Map". The following cancer signaling pathways are hosted by Netpath:

  • Epidermal growth factor receptor Pathway14
  • Transforming growth factor beta receptor pathway15
  • Tumor necrosis factor alpha pathway16
  • Alpha6 Beta4 Integrin pathway17
  • Inhibitor of DNA binding pathway18
  • Hedgehog pathway19
  • Notch pathway20
  • Wnt pathway21
  • Androgen receptor pathway22
  • Kit receptor pathway23

Current statistics

Curated pathways45
Molecules involved1,053
Physical interactions2,448
Genes transcriptionally regulated7,401
Transport284
Enzyme catalysis1,597
PubMed citations2,228

Community participation programme

The community participation programme is aimed at training the students in various universities from India on curation of pathway reactions. This is a joint programme led by the Institute of Bioinformatics (IOB), Bangalore, India with active participation from Akhilesh Pandey's laboratory at the Johns Hopkins University (USA) and Gary Bader's lab at the University of Toronto, Canada. Currently, students from 3 major Indian Universities namely Pondicherry University, University of Pune and University of Mysore are participants of this community effort.

References

  1. Kandasamy, Kumaran; Mohan, Sujatha; Raju, Rajesh; Keerthikumar, Shivakumar; Kumar, Ghantasala S Sameer; Venugopal, Abhilash K; Telikicherla, Deepthi; Navarro, Daniel J; Mathivanan, Suresh (2010). "NetPath: a public resource of curated signal transduction pathways". Genome Biology. 11 (1): R3. doi:10.1186/gb-2010-11-1-r3. PMC 2847715. PMID 20067622. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2847715

  2. Dr. Akhilesh Pandey's laboratory http://pandeylab.igm.jhmi.edu

  3. Kandasamy, K.; Keerthikumar, S.; Raju, R.; Keshava Prasad, T. S.; Ramachandra, Y. L.; Mohan, S.; Pandey, A. (2009). "PathBuilder--open source software for annotating and developing pathway resources". Bioinformatics. 25 (21): 2860–2. doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/btp453. PMC 2781757. PMID 19628504. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2781757

  4. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_12

  5. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_11

  6. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_13

  7. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_14

  8. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_15

  9. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_16

  10. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_17

  11. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_18

  12. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_19

  13. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_20

  14. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_4

  15. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_7

  16. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_9

  17. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_1

  18. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_5

  19. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_10

  20. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_3

  21. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_8

  22. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_2

  23. "NetPath - Signal Transduction Pathways". http://www.netpath.org/pathways?path_id=NetPath_6