Scientists seeking to understand the inner workings of cells have access to a multitude of pathway data resources. However, the representations of pathway data within these resources are not consistent or interchangeable. To facilitate easy information retrieval from a wide variety of pathway resources, such as signal transduction, gene regulation, molecular interaction and metabolic pathway databases, a broad effort in the biopathways community called BioPAX was formed. New biological pathway software applications built using the BioPAX standard will be able to integrate knowledge from multiple sources in a coherent and reliable way. This article reports the progress that the BioPAX work-group has made towards building and deploying the BioPAX data-exchange format for biological pathway data.
Description
PAX of mind for pathway researchers. [Drug Discov Today. 2005] - PubMed Result
%0 Journal Article
%1 Luciano:2005
%A Luciano, J S
%D 2005
%J Drug Discov Today
%K bio imported ontology pathway proj:0915 proj:o4p
%N 13
%P 937-942
%R 10.1016/S1359-6446(05)03501-4
%T PAX of mind for pathway researchers
%U http://genepath.med.harvard.edu/wiki/images/5/58/Luciano_DDT_July1_2005.pdf
%V 10
%X Scientists seeking to understand the inner workings of cells have access to a multitude of pathway data resources. However, the representations of pathway data within these resources are not consistent or interchangeable. To facilitate easy information retrieval from a wide variety of pathway resources, such as signal transduction, gene regulation, molecular interaction and metabolic pathway databases, a broad effort in the biopathways community called BioPAX was formed. New biological pathway software applications built using the BioPAX standard will be able to integrate knowledge from multiple sources in a coherent and reliable way. This article reports the progress that the BioPAX work-group has made towards building and deploying the BioPAX data-exchange format for biological pathway data.
@article{Luciano:2005,
abstract = {Scientists seeking to understand the inner workings of cells have access to a multitude of pathway data resources. However, the representations of pathway data within these resources are not consistent or interchangeable. To facilitate easy information retrieval from a wide variety of pathway resources, such as signal transduction, gene regulation, molecular interaction and metabolic pathway databases, a broad effort in the biopathways community called BioPAX was formed. New biological pathway software applications built using the BioPAX standard will be able to integrate knowledge from multiple sources in a coherent and reliable way. This article reports the progress that the BioPAX work-group has made towards building and deploying the BioPAX data-exchange format for biological pathway data.},
added-at = {2010-05-27T23:36:14.000+0200},
author = {Luciano, J S},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/22836b6ec8dc1f18875a3321b77adc8c2/wnpxrz},
description = {PAX of mind for pathway researchers. [Drug Discov Today. 2005] - PubMed Result},
doi = {10.1016/S1359-6446(05)03501-4},
interhash = {b5646d8953d07be5db4503765ca4708b},
intrahash = {2836b6ec8dc1f18875a3321b77adc8c2},
journal = {Drug Discov Today},
keywords = {bio imported ontology pathway proj:0915 proj:o4p},
month = jul,
number = 13,
pages = {937-942},
pmid = {15993813},
timestamp = {2010-05-27T23:36:14.000+0200},
title = {{PAX of mind for pathway researchers}},
url = {http://genepath.med.harvard.edu/wiki/images/5/58/Luciano_DDT_July1_2005.pdf},
volume = 10,
year = 2005
}