Database Commons
Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

HINT

General information

URL: http://hint.yulab.org
Full name: High-quality INTeractomes
Description: HINT (High-quality INTeractomes) is a curated compilation of high-quality protein-protein interactions from 8 interactome resources (BioGRID, MINT, iRefWeb, DIP, IntAct, HPRD, MIPS and the PDB).
Year founded: 2012
Last update:
Version: 4
Accessibility:
Accessible
Country/Region: United States

Classification & Tag

Data type:
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Contact information

University/Institution: Cornell University
Address: Department of Biological Statistics and Computational Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA
City: Ithaca
Province/State:
Country/Region: United States
Contact name (PI/Team): Haiyuan Yu
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): haiyuan.yu@cornell.edu

Publications

22846459
HINT: High-quality protein interactomes and their applications in understanding human disease. [PMID: 22846459]
Das J, Yu H.

BACKGROUND: A global map of protein-protein interactions in cellular systems provides key insights into the workings of an organism. A repository of well-validated high-quality protein-protein interactions can be used in both large- and small-scale studies to generate and validate a wide range of functional hypotheses.
RESULTS: We develop HINT (http://hint.yulab.org) - a database of high-quality protein-protein interactomes for human, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Schizosaccharomyces pombe, and Oryza sativa. These were collected from several databases and filtered both systematically and manually to remove low-quality/erroneous interactions. The resulting datasets are classified by type (binary physical interactions vs. co-complex associations) and data source (high-throughput systematic setups vs. literature-curated small-scale experiments). We find strong sociological sampling biases in literature-curated datasets of small-scale interactions. An interactome without such sampling biases was used to understand network properties of human disease-genes - hubs are unlikely to cause disease, but if they do, they usually cause multiple disorders.
CONCLUSIONS: HINT is of significant interest to researchers in all fields of biology as it addresses the ubiquitous need of having a repository of high-quality protein-protein interactions. These datasets can be utilized to generate specific hypotheses about specific proteins and/or pathways, as well as analyzing global properties of cellular networks. HINT will be regularly updated and all versions will be tracked.

BMC Syst Biol. 2012:6() | 300 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-20)

Ranking

All databases:
720/6895 (89.572%)
Interaction:
133/1194 (88.945%)
720
Total Rank
285
Citations
21.923
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Record metadata

Created on: 2018-01-29
Curated by:
Fatima Batool [2018-09-03]
Pei Wang [2018-02-24]