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Kanehisa M, et al. (2008) KEGG for linking genomes to life and the environment. Nucleic Acids Res. 36(Database issue):D480-4

Title KEGG for linking genomes to life and the environment.
Abstract KEGG (http://www.genome.jp/kegg/) is a database of biological systems that integrates genomic, chemical and systemic functional information. KEGG provides a reference knowledge base for linking genomes to life through the process of PATHWAY mapping, which is to map, for example, a genomic or transcriptomic content of genes to KEGG reference pathways to infer systemic behaviors of the cell or the organism. In addition, KEGG provides a reference knowledge base for linking genomes to the environment, such as for the analysis of drug-target relationships, through the process of BRITE mapping. KEGG BRITE is an ontology database representing functional hierarchies of various biological objects, including molecules, cells, organisms, diseases and drugs, as well as relationships among them. KEGG PATHWAY is now supplemented with a new global map of metabolic pathways, which is essentially a combined map of about 120 existing pathway maps. In addition, smaller pathway modules are defined and stored in KEGG MODULE that also contains other functional units and complexes. The KEGG resource is being expanded to suit the needs for practical applications. KEGG DRUG contains all approved drugs in the US and Japan, and KEGG DISEASE is a new database linking disease genes, pathways, drugs and diagnostic markers.
Authors Kanehisa M, Araki M, Goto S, Hattori M, Hirakawa M, Itoh M, Katayama T, Kawashima S, Okuda S, Tokimatsu T, Yamanishi Y
Author Affiliation Bioinformatics Center, Institute for Chemical Research, Kyoto University, Uji, Kyoto, Japan.
Journal Nucleic Acids Res. (ISSN:1362-4962)
Publication Date Jan 2008
MeSH Keywords Databases, Factual, Disease, Genomics, Humans, Internet, Metabolic Networks and Pathways, Molecular Structure, Pharmaceutical Preparations/chemistry, Systems Biology, Systems Integration, User-Computer Interface
Link PubMed
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