Groups of genes that are frequently observed in each other's genomic neighborhood.
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Databases
Known metabolic pathways, protein complexes, signal transduction pathways, etc ... from curated databases.
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Fusion
Genes that are sometimes fused into single open reading frames.
STRING allows inspection of the interaction evidence for any given network. Choose any of the viewers above (disabled if not applicable in your network).
Nodes:
Network nodes represent proteins
splice isoforms or post-translational modifications are collapsed, i.e. each node represents all the proteins produced by a single, protein-coding gene locus.
Node Color
colored nodes: query proteins and first shell of interactors
white nodes: second shell of interactors
Node Content
empty nodes: proteins of unknown 3D structure
filled nodes: a 3D structure is known or predicted
Edges:
Edges represent protein-protein associations
associations are meant to be specific and meaningful, i.e. proteins jointly contribute to a shared function; this does not necessarily mean they are physically binding to each other.
Known Interactions
from curated databases
experimentally determined
Predicted Interactions
gene neighborhood
gene fusions
gene co-occurrence
Others
textmining
co-expression
protein homology
Your Input:
Fgfr2
Fibroblast growth factor receptor 2. (659 aa)
Sox10
Transcription factor SOX-10. (466 aa)
Pax6
Paired box protein Pax-6. (544 aa)
I79_000973
Transcription factor SOX-10. (360 aa)
Your Current Organism:
Cricetulus griseus
NCBI taxonomy Id: 10029 Other names: C. griseus, CHO cell lines, Chinese hamster, Chinese hamsters, Cricetulus aureus, Cricetulus barabensis griseus