Database Commons
Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

UM-PPS

General information

URL: http://umbbd.msi.umn.edu/predict/
Full name: The University of Minnesota pathway prediction system
Description: The University of Minnesota pathway prediction system recognizes functional groups in organic compounds that are potential targets of microbial catabolic reactions, and predicts transformations of these groups based on biotransformation rules. Rules are based on the University of Minnesota biocatalysis/biodegradation database (http://umbbd.msi.umn.edu/) and the scientific literature.
Year founded: 2008
Last update:
Version:
Accessibility:
Unaccessible
Country/Region: United States

Classification & Tag

Data type:
Data object:
NA
Database category:
Major species:
NA
Keywords:

Contact information

University/Institution: University of Minnesota
Address:
City:
Province/State:
Country/Region: United States
Contact name (PI/Team): Ellis LB
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): lynda@umn.edu

Publications

18524801
The University of Minnesota pathway prediction system: predicting metabolic logic. [PMID: 18524801]
Ellis LB, Gao J, Fenner K, Wackett LP.

The University of Minnesota pathway prediction system (UM-PPS, http://umbbd.msi.umn.edu/predict/) recognizes functional groups in organic compounds that are potential targets of microbial catabolic reactions, and predicts transformations of these groups based on biotransformation rules. Rules are based on the University of Minnesota biocatalysis/biodegradation database (http://umbbd.msi.umn.edu/) and the scientific literature. As rules were added to the UM-PPS, more of them were triggered at each prediction step. The resulting combinatorial explosion is being addressed in four ways. Biodegradation experts give each rule an aerobic likelihood value of Very Likely, Likely, Neutral, Unlikely or Very Unlikely. Users now can choose whether they view all, or only the more aerobically likely, predicted transformations. Relative reasoning, allowing triggering of some rules to inhibit triggering of others, was implemented. Rules were initially assigned to individual chemical reactions. In selected cases, these have been replaced by super rules, which include two or more contiguous reactions that form a small pathway of their own. Rules are continually modified to improve the prediction accuracy; increasing rule stringency can improve predictions and reduce extraneous choices. The UM-PPS is freely available to all without registration. Its value to the scientific community, for academic, industrial and government use, is good and will only increase.

Nucleic Acids Res. 2008:36(Web Server issue) | 61 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-20)

Ranking

All databases:
3089/6895 (55.214%)
Pathway:
191/451 (57.871%)
3089
Total Rank
57
Citations
3.353
z-index

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Record metadata

Created on: 2018-01-28
Curated by:
Dong Zou [2020-01-06]
Mengyu Pan [2018-09-21]
Mengyu Pan [2018-03-16]