Abstract

The Saccharomyces Genome Database (SGD) provides comprehensive, integrated biological information for the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, along with search and analysis tools to explore these data, enabling the discovery of functional relationships between sequence and gene products in fungi and higher organisms. We have recently expanded our data model for regulation curation to address regulation at the protein level in addition to transcription, and are presenting the expanded data on the ‘Regulation’ pages at SGD. These pages include a summary describing the context under which the regulator acts, manually curated and high-throughput annotations showing the regulatory relationships for that gene and a graphical visualization of its regulatory network and connected networks. For genes whose products regulate other genes or proteins, the Regulation page includes Gene Ontology enrichment analysis of the biological processes in which those targets participate. For DNA-binding transcription factors, we also provide other information relevant to their regulatory function, such as DNA binding site motifs and protein domains. As with other data types at SGD, all regulatory relationships and accompanying data are available through YeastMine, SGD’s data warehouse based on InterMine. Database URL: http://www.yeastgenome.org

Highlights

  • The Saccharomyces Genome Database (SGD; http://www. yeastgenome.org) collects and organizes scientific information regarding the genes, proteins and other chromosomal features of the model organism Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and makes this knowledge freely available to the public. This information includes regulatory relationships that exist between specific genes and proteins, in which one entity controls some aspect of the expression or enzymatic activity of the other

  • As with other types of data collected at SGD, the primary source of regulation annotations is research results published in the scientific literature

  • We describe here the expanded regulation curation model recently put into place at SGD

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Summary

Introduction

This information includes regulatory relationships that exist between specific genes and proteins, in which one entity controls some aspect of the expression or enzymatic activity of the other. Data from largescale screens for RNA expression levels, chromatin immunoprecipitation, or other types of screens that use genomic techniques, were previously used to seed the SGD Regulation pages in an effort to provide broad coverage for as many genes as possible. SGD curators survey the yeast literature to find and record regulatory relationships for as many genes as possible in the yeast genome.

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