What'S The Most Comprehensive Database/Resource For Human Protein-Protein Interactions?
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10.8 years ago
enricoferrero ▴ 900

I need to programmatically access human protein-protein interactions to retrieve interactions between specific classes of molecules, but there are many protein-protein interactions databases around, especially for Homo sapiens (e.g. BIOGrid, HPRD, Reactome, MINT, DIP, STRING... just to name a few).

What's the most comprehensive resource altogether? Is there a database that somehow integrates all of the other ones? I'd just need a flat text file with all the interactions and the classes of the interacting molecules (e.g. 'transcription factor', 'GTPase', 'lipid phosphatase'...).

Thanks!

interaction database human • 4.6k views
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David has suggested a R code for my question earlier. It might be useful. Check this link: http://brainchronicle.blogspot.co.uk/2012/05/obtain-protein-protein-interaction-from.html

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10.8 years ago
Noa ▴ 50

Yes the HIPPIE database (Scheafer et al 2012) combines all human PPI data from 11 databses and manually curated papers

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This is a good suggestion - It looks to me like HIPPIE provides more human interactions thatn Bisogenet, and the database can easily be downloaded.

http://cbdm.mdc-berlin.de/tools/hippie/download.php

I will probably use this resource in the future!

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10.8 years ago

For open-source resources try PSIQUIC View (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/Tools/webservices/psicquic/view/main.xhtml). Set the organism field to 'human'.

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10.8 years ago

If your institution has a license, IPA should contain information from most of all of these databases. This is what I would use.

MetaGO is another commercial program that I know of with similar functionality that could probably also accomplish this.

For an open-source solution, I would check out the files provided by NCBI. For example, if you search any gene (like BRCA1) in NCBI Gene, you can find all of this information. Therefore, I assume the information can be obtained somehow from the NCBI flat files:

Example: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/672

NCBI FTP: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Ftp/

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10.8 years ago
Diwan ▴ 650

I found Bisogenet cytoscape plugin very helpful. It uses sysbiomics database that includes most of the above.

link: http://bio.cigb.edu.cu/SBweb/index.jsp

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