Abstract

BackgroundHuman protein-protein interaction (PPI) data is essential to network and systems biology studies. PPI data can help biochemists hypothesize how proteins form complexes by binding to each other, how extracellular signals propagate through post-translational modification of de-activated signaling molecules, and how chemical reactions are coupled by enzymes involved in a complex biological process. Our capability to develop good public database resources for human PPI data has a direct impact on the quality of future research on genome biology and medicine.ResultsThe database of Human Annotated and Predicted Protein Interactions (HAPPI) version 2.0 is a major update to the original HAPPI 1.0 database. It contains 2,922,202 unique protein-protein interactions (PPI) linked by 23,060 human proteins, making it the most comprehensive database covering human PPI data today. These PPIs contain both physical/direct interactions and high-quality functional/indirect interactions. Compared with the HAPPI 1.0 database release, HAPPI database version 2.0 (HAPPI-2) represents a 485% of human PPI data coverage increase and a 73% protein coverage increase. The revamped HAPPI web portal provides users with a friendly search, curation, and data retrieval interface, allowing them to retrieve human PPIs and available annotation information on the interaction type, interaction quality, interacting partner drug targeting data, and disease information. The updated HAPPI-2 can be freely accessed by Academic users at http://discovery.informatics.uab.edu/HAPPI.ConclusionsWhile the underlying data for HAPPI-2 are integrated from a diverse data sources, the new HAPPI-2 release represents a good balance between data coverage and data quality of human PPIs, making it ideally suited for network biology.

Highlights

  • Human protein-protein interaction (PPI) data is essential to network and systems biology studies

  • In 2009, we reported in the Human Annotated and Predicted Protein Interactions (HAPPI) database release 1.0 (HAPPI-1) a catalogue of more than 140,000 mediumto-high-confidence human protein-protein interactions (PPI) [19]

  • Content coverage We have developed the HAPPI database version 2.0 (HAPPI-2) database to include 2,922,202 distinct human PPIs, the largest integrated compilation of human PPIs today

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Summary

Introduction

Human protein-protein interaction (PPI) data is essential to network and systems biology studies. Our capability to develop good public database resources for human PPI data has a direct impact on the quality of future research on genome biology and medicine. The STRING database tried to overcome the limited PPI data coverage issue through comprehensive collection of known and predicted protein interactions, which include 2,132,575 direct (physical) and indirect (functional) associations for human. Researchers favor PPI databases with categorical classifications that express how closely the two proteins are related functionally or physically during an PPI event than those without such information [24,25,26] This demand drives ongoing efforts in human PPI data integration and annotation

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