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Human Genome News Archive Edition

Vol.10, No.3-4   October 1999 
Available in PDF 
 
In this issue... 

DOE '99 Oakland Highlights
* Meeting Intro
* HGP Progress, Challenges
* Joint Genome Institute
*
JGI Facility Opening
*
Sequencing
*
Device Speeds Sequencing
* Chromosome 19 Genes
* Functional Genomics
* Sample Prep System
* Informatics
* Education & Bioethics
* Microbial Genomes
* Next Meeting Feb. 2000

Genome Project
* Accelerated Timetable
* FY1999 Budgets
* JGI Refits Facility
* Progress

In the News 
* Drosophila Near Completion
* Directors, Researchers Receive Awards
* Chromosomes 21, 22 Near Finish
* Human MHC Region Sequenced
* Mouse Probes Aid Mapping
* Genetic Testing Committee
* DOE Labs & Biomedicine
* Biomedical Engineering Proposals
* Drug Firms Create SNP Resource
* SBIR 1999 Awards
* HUGO News
* 1999 Hollaender Winners

Microbial Genomics 
* EcoCyc Database for E. coli
* Developing EcoCyc
* Thermotoga Sequence
* Clostridium Sequenced
* Microbial Gene Finder
* Neisseria Sequence
* Microbial Web Sites

Ethical, Legal, and Social Issues
* Education, Counseling Foundation
* ELSI Studies
* ELSI Retrospective
* Protecting Privacy

Informatics 
* MGI 2.2 Released
* DNA Repository

Web, Other Resources, Publications 
* Metabolic Pathways
* New Staden Package
* PDB Newsletter
* Polymorphism Database
* Bacterial Protein Database
* DOE BER Publications
* HGP Information Web
* Biotechnology Business Webs
* Behavioral Genetics
* Office of Science Reports
* Articles on Genetics

Funding 
* Genome Research Funding

Meeting Calendars & Acronyms 
* Genome & Biotech Meetings 
* Training Courses & Workshops 
* Acronyms 


*HGN archives & subscriptions 
*HGP Information home

Microbial Genomics

EcoCyc Database for E. coli

The EcoCyc electronic database is a literature-derived resource that describes the genome and biochemical machinery of Escherichia coli. The database contains up-to-date annotations and the DNA sequences of all genes in E. coli and describes all known pathways of its small-molecule metabolism. Each pathway and its component reactions and enzymes are annotated in rich detail, with extensive references to the biomedical literature. For example, the detail provided for each E.coli enzyme includes its cofactors, activators, inhibitors, and subunit structure. In July, the database included 159 metabolic pathways, 946 reactions, 629 enzymes, and 4390 genes.

EcoCyc also is used by investigators to annotate other microbial genomes. Because E.coli has the largest fraction of gene products whose functions were determined experimentally, sequence- similarity matches to E.coli are less likely to result in incorrect function predictions than are matches to other microbial genomes. Those genomes may have a higher rate of annotation errors due to computational, and perhaps transitive, misannotation.

EcoCyc Features

EcoCyc's Pathway Tools software provides a powerful environment for creating, managing, and publishing pathway and genome databases (DBs) on the Web. One of the components is the Pathway Genome Navigator, which allows users to query these DBs and to visualize and compare the resulting pathways, genes, genome maps, reactions, and enzymes. The PathoLogic program computationally predicts an organism's metabolic-pathway complement and creates a DB describing that prediction. A set of graphical tools allows users to edit the annotations interactively.

Future Directions

The EcoCyc project is now moving beyond E.coli metabolic pathways to include signal-transduction pathways, transport proteins, regulation of gene expression, and tRNAs. Version5.0, released in June, contains detailed annotations of E.coli phosphotransferase-system transporters authored by collaborators Milton Saier and Ian Paulsen (University of California, San Diego). In addition, Julio Collado (Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico) is adding descriptions of E.coli gene regulation, including operons, promoters, and DNA-binding proteins. Once the regulatory mechanisms are added to EcoCyc, researchers will be able to compare known mechanisms of E.coli gene regulation with microarray-derived gene-expression data.

Pangea Systems, a bioinformatics company in Oakland, California, makes EcoCyc available free to the academic community and for a fee to commercial organizations. The company is interested in collaborating with academic genome centers to use the Pathway Tools for curation and Web publishing of their genomes. [Peter Karp, pkarp@pangeasystems.com; Monica Riley, mriley@mbl.edu; EcoCyc]

See also: "Developing EcoCyc"


The electronic form of the newsletter may be cited in the following style:
Human Genome Program, U.S. Department of Energy, Human Genome News (v10n3-4).

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