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Multilayered Networks of SalmoNet2 Enable Strain Comparisons of the Salmonella Genus on a Molecular Level

Serovars of the genus Salmonella primarily evolved as gastrointestinal pathogens in a wide range of hosts. Some serotypes later evolved further, adopting a more invasive lifestyle in a narrower host range associated with systemic infections. A system-level knowledge of these pathogens could identify...

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Autores principales: Olbei, Marton, Bohar, Balazs, Fazekas, David, Madgwick, Matthew, Sudhakar, Padhmanand, Hautefort, Isabelle, Métris, Aline, Baranyi, Jozsef, Kingsley, Robert A., Korcsmaros, Tamas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9426430/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35913188
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/msystems.01493-21
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author Olbei, Marton
Bohar, Balazs
Fazekas, David
Madgwick, Matthew
Sudhakar, Padhmanand
Hautefort, Isabelle
Métris, Aline
Baranyi, Jozsef
Kingsley, Robert A.
Korcsmaros, Tamas
author_facet Olbei, Marton
Bohar, Balazs
Fazekas, David
Madgwick, Matthew
Sudhakar, Padhmanand
Hautefort, Isabelle
Métris, Aline
Baranyi, Jozsef
Kingsley, Robert A.
Korcsmaros, Tamas
author_sort Olbei, Marton
collection PubMed
description Serovars of the genus Salmonella primarily evolved as gastrointestinal pathogens in a wide range of hosts. Some serotypes later evolved further, adopting a more invasive lifestyle in a narrower host range associated with systemic infections. A system-level knowledge of these pathogens could identify the complex adaptations associated with the evolution of serovars with distinct pathogenicity, host range, and risk to human health. This promises to aid the design of interventions and serve as a knowledge base in the Salmonella research community. Here, we present SalmoNet2, a major update to SalmoNet1, the first multilayered interaction resource for Salmonella strains, containing protein-protein, transcriptional regulatory, and enzyme-enzyme interactions. The new version extends the number of Salmonella networks from 11 to 20. We now include a strain from the second species in the Salmonella genus, a strain from the Salmonella enterica subspecies arizonae and additional strains of importance from the subspecies enterica, including S. Typhimurium strain D23580, an epidemic multidrug-resistant strain associated with invasive nontyphoidal salmonellosis (iNTS). The database now uses strain specific metabolic models instead of a generalized model to highlight differences between strains. The update has increased the coverage of high-quality protein-protein interactions, and enhanced interoperability with other computational resources by adopting standardized formats. The resource website has been updated with tutorials to help researchers analyze their Salmonella data using molecular interaction networks from SalmoNet2. SalmoNet2 is accessible at http://salmonet.org/. IMPORTANCE Multilayered network databases collate interaction information from multiple sources, and are powerful both as a knowledge base and subject of analysis. Here, we present SalmoNet2, an integrated network resource containing protein-protein, transcriptional regulatory, and metabolic interactions for 20 Salmonella strains. Key improvements to the update include expanding the number of strains, strain-specific metabolic networks, an increase in high-quality protein-protein interactions, community standard computational formats to help interoperability, and online tutorials to help users analyze their data using SalmoNet2.
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spelling pubmed-94264302022-08-31 Multilayered Networks of SalmoNet2 Enable Strain Comparisons of the Salmonella Genus on a Molecular Level Olbei, Marton Bohar, Balazs Fazekas, David Madgwick, Matthew Sudhakar, Padhmanand Hautefort, Isabelle Métris, Aline Baranyi, Jozsef Kingsley, Robert A. Korcsmaros, Tamas mSystems Resource Report Serovars of the genus Salmonella primarily evolved as gastrointestinal pathogens in a wide range of hosts. Some serotypes later evolved further, adopting a more invasive lifestyle in a narrower host range associated with systemic infections. A system-level knowledge of these pathogens could identify the complex adaptations associated with the evolution of serovars with distinct pathogenicity, host range, and risk to human health. This promises to aid the design of interventions and serve as a knowledge base in the Salmonella research community. Here, we present SalmoNet2, a major update to SalmoNet1, the first multilayered interaction resource for Salmonella strains, containing protein-protein, transcriptional regulatory, and enzyme-enzyme interactions. The new version extends the number of Salmonella networks from 11 to 20. We now include a strain from the second species in the Salmonella genus, a strain from the Salmonella enterica subspecies arizonae and additional strains of importance from the subspecies enterica, including S. Typhimurium strain D23580, an epidemic multidrug-resistant strain associated with invasive nontyphoidal salmonellosis (iNTS). The database now uses strain specific metabolic models instead of a generalized model to highlight differences between strains. The update has increased the coverage of high-quality protein-protein interactions, and enhanced interoperability with other computational resources by adopting standardized formats. The resource website has been updated with tutorials to help researchers analyze their Salmonella data using molecular interaction networks from SalmoNet2. SalmoNet2 is accessible at http://salmonet.org/. IMPORTANCE Multilayered network databases collate interaction information from multiple sources, and are powerful both as a knowledge base and subject of analysis. Here, we present SalmoNet2, an integrated network resource containing protein-protein, transcriptional regulatory, and metabolic interactions for 20 Salmonella strains. Key improvements to the update include expanding the number of strains, strain-specific metabolic networks, an increase in high-quality protein-protein interactions, community standard computational formats to help interoperability, and online tutorials to help users analyze their data using SalmoNet2. American Society for Microbiology 2022-08-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9426430/ /pubmed/35913188 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/msystems.01493-21 Text en Copyright © 2022 Olbei et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Resource Report
Olbei, Marton
Bohar, Balazs
Fazekas, David
Madgwick, Matthew
Sudhakar, Padhmanand
Hautefort, Isabelle
Métris, Aline
Baranyi, Jozsef
Kingsley, Robert A.
Korcsmaros, Tamas
Multilayered Networks of SalmoNet2 Enable Strain Comparisons of the Salmonella Genus on a Molecular Level
title Multilayered Networks of SalmoNet2 Enable Strain Comparisons of the Salmonella Genus on a Molecular Level
title_full Multilayered Networks of SalmoNet2 Enable Strain Comparisons of the Salmonella Genus on a Molecular Level
title_fullStr Multilayered Networks of SalmoNet2 Enable Strain Comparisons of the Salmonella Genus on a Molecular Level
title_full_unstemmed Multilayered Networks of SalmoNet2 Enable Strain Comparisons of the Salmonella Genus on a Molecular Level
title_short Multilayered Networks of SalmoNet2 Enable Strain Comparisons of the Salmonella Genus on a Molecular Level
title_sort multilayered networks of salmonet2 enable strain comparisons of the salmonella genus on a molecular level
topic Resource Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9426430/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35913188
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/msystems.01493-21
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