Abstract

The basic information in Reactome is provided by bench biologists who are experts on a particular pathway, the Reactome Team is always working hard to drive engagement. This engagement between experts, curators, editors and reviewers requires maintenance and improvement, and in this sense Reactome is itself a model for large biocuration projects that are driven by community engagement. This tutorial will highlight issues from the perspective of online training participants, the trainer's and the audience's. From the audience perspective the tutorial will introduce the concepts that drive the Reactome data model, cover the basic steps that a researcher would have to follow in order to breakdown a biological pathway into its "reaction-based" Reactome representation. Introduce the user to the tools that are used by authors, the "authortool" and the tools used by curators, the "curatortool" to move that data into the Reactome database. From the trainer perspective the tutorial will focus on the essential role that a clear explanation of a resource's data model plays in priming the audience for the technical aspects of biocuration. Technical challenges and online delivery methods will be discussed and examples of systems used will be presented with discussion of the negative and positive aspects. Pedagogical models for enhancing audience participation will be briefly presented. The Reactome project is a collaboration among Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, The European Bioinformatics Institute, and The Gene Ontology Consortium to develop a curated resource of core pathways and reactions in human biology. The information in this database is authored by biological researchers with expertise in their fields, maintained by the Reactome editorial staff, and cross referenced with the sequence databases at NCBI, Ensembl and UniProt, the UCSC Genome Browser , KEGG (Gene and Compound ), ChEBI, PubMed and GO. The information is then managed by groups of curators at CSHL and EBI, peer-reviewed by other researchers and published on the web. While Reactome is targeted at human pathways, it also includes many individual biochemical reactions from non-human systems such as rat, mouse, pufferfish and zebrafish. This makes the database relevant to the many researchers who work on model organisms. All the information in Reactome is backed up by its provenance: either a literature citation or an electronic inference based on sequence similarity. Reactome is a free on-line resource, and Reactome software is open-source.

Highlights

  • Module ProductionRecruit bench scientists to write modules. Authors use a software tool to describe their pathway

  • No Matter what tools you choose the online session should be: Live Simple to use Responsive Recordable

  • The goal of the Reactome knowledgebase is to represent human biological processes, but many of these processes have not been directly studied in humans

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Summary

Module Production

Recruit bench scientists to write modules. Authors use a software tool to describe their pathway.

Data Model
Regular Refreshers
Full Text
Published version (Free)

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