Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
Over the past few years, the number of known protein-protein interactions has increased substantially. To make this information more readily available, a number of publicly available databases have set out to collect and store protein-protein interaction data. Protein-protein interactions have been retrieved from six major databases, integrated and the results compared. The six databases (the Biological General Repository for Interaction Datasets BioGRID, the Molecular INTeraction database MINT, the Biomolecular Interaction Network Database BIND, the Database of Interacting Proteins DIP, the IntAct molecular interaction database IntAct and the Human Protein Reference Database HPRD) differ in scope and content; integration of all datasets is non-trivial owing to differences in data annotation. With respect to human protein-protein interaction data, HPRD seems to be the most comprehensive. To obtain a complete dataset, however, interactions from all six databases have to be combined. To overcome this limitation, meta-databases such as the Agile Protein Interaction Database (APID) offer access to integrated protein-protein interaction datasets, although these also currently have certain restrictions.
Lehne et al. (Wed,) studied this question.