New standards for Graphically Representing Biological Information
Till now,
biology lacked a standardized notation for describing biological interactions.
This was a big drawback in pursuing biological research. The vacuum was clearly
felt by many scientists. This has just been overcome by dedicated research and
development.
Scientists from California
Institute of Technology (Caltech) and their colleagues from 30 labs round the world
worldwide have devised a new set of standards for graphically representing
biological information. The innovators have described it as biology equivalent
of the circuit diagram in electronics.
The project which
was initiated by Hiroaki Kitano of the Systems Biology Institute in Tokyo, Japan,
is coordinated by Nicolas Le Novère of the European Molecular Biology
Laboratory's European Bioinformatics Institute in Cambridge, England, and
senior research fellow Michael Hucka, co-director of the Biological Network
Modeling Center at Caltech's Beckman Institute.
To ensure that the newly developed
system does not become too vast and complicated, the researchers decided to
define three separate types of diagram, which defines molecular process,
relationships between entities, and links among biochemical activities. These
different types of diagrams complement each other by representing different
"views" of the same information, presented in different ways for different
purposes. This approach reduces the complexity of any one type of diagram while
broadening the range of what can be expressed about a given biological system.
The new standard was published in
the August 8 issue of the journal Nature Biotechnology.
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