The Database of Interacting Proteins (DIP: http://dip.doe-mbi.ucla.edu)
is a database that documents experimentally determined protein–protein
interactions. It provides the scientific community with an integrated
set of tools for browsing and extracting information about protein
interaction networks. As of September 2001, the DIP catalogs ~11
000 unique interactions among 5900 proteins from >80 organisms; the
vast majority from yeast, Helicobacter pylori and human. Tools have
been developed that allow users to analyze, visualize and integrate
their own experimental data with the information about protein–protein
interactions available in the DIP database.
%0 Journal Article
%1 Xenarios:2002
%A Xenarios, Ioannis
%A Salwinski, Lukasz
%A Duan, Xiaoqun Joyce
%A Higney, Patrick
%A Kim, Sul-Min
%A Eisenberg, David
%D 2002
%J Nucleic Acids Research
%K interaction protein
%N 1
%P 303--305
%T DIP, the database of interacting proteins: A research tool for studying
cellular networks of protein interactions
%U http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/30/1/303?ijkey=lVvmq2t6UjLVU&ke
%V 30
%X The Database of Interacting Proteins (DIP: http://dip.doe-mbi.ucla.edu)
is a database that documents experimentally determined protein–protein
interactions. It provides the scientific community with an integrated
set of tools for browsing and extracting information about protein
interaction networks. As of September 2001, the DIP catalogs ~11
000 unique interactions among 5900 proteins from >80 organisms; the
vast majority from yeast, Helicobacter pylori and human. Tools have
been developed that allow users to analyze, visualize and integrate
their own experimental data with the information about protein–protein
interactions available in the DIP database.
@article{Xenarios:2002,
abstract = {The Database of Interacting Proteins (DIP: http://dip.doe-mbi.ucla.edu)
is a database that documents experimentally determined protein–protein
interactions. It provides the scientific community with an integrated
set of tools for browsing and extracting information about protein
interaction networks. As of September 2001, the DIP catalogs ~11
000 unique interactions among 5900 proteins from >80 organisms; the
vast majority from yeast, Helicobacter pylori and human. Tools have
been developed that allow users to analyze, visualize and integrate
their own experimental data with the information about protein–protein
interactions available in the DIP database.},
added-at = {2007-10-23T13:35:30.000+0200},
author = {Xenarios, Ioannis and Salwinski, Lukasz and Duan, Xiaoqun Joyce and Higney, Patrick and Kim, Sul-Min and Eisenberg, David},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2e31690e4c0ce4e67c245ce84333e6296/tkirsten},
interhash = {df51a1d3135bf197298ab00425d92e68},
intrahash = {e31690e4c0ce4e67c245ce84333e6296},
journal = {Nucleic Acids Research},
keywords = {interaction protein},
number = 1,
owner = {kirsten},
pages = {303--305},
timestamp = {2007-10-23T13:49:19.000+0200},
title = {{DIP, the database of interacting proteins: A research tool for studying
cellular networks of protein interactions}},
url = {http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/30/1/303?ijkey=lVvmq2t6UjLVU&ke},
volume = 30,
year = 2002
}