SOORENA
SOORENA
Based on current filters
Performance metrics from the published SOORENA study
Source: bioRxiv preprint doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2025.11.03.685842
SOORENA
A structured classification of self-directed biochemical processes identified and categorized by the SOORENA pipeline.
A chemical reaction in which its product or intermediate accelerates the same reaction. Supports nonlinear self-reinforcement and chemical self-organization.
self-catalysis, autocatalysis, self-reinforcing reaction
heterocatalysis, enzyme-catalyzed
chemical oscillation, nonlinear dynamics
Key References:
A protein kinase phosphorylates its own amino acid residues (cis or trans), tuning its conformation, catalytic activity, localization, and signaling dynamics.
self-phosphorylation, cis-phosphorylation, intramolecular phosphorylation
dephosphorylation, heterophosphorylation
autokinase
Key References:
The process by which a protein removes phosphate groups from itself, typically through intrinsic phosphatase activity or conformational changes that reverse autophosphorylation.
self-dephosphorylation, autophosphatase activity, intrinsic phosphatase
autophosphorylation, heterophosphatase
autophosphorylation, phosphatase activity
Key References:
The process where an acetyltransferase acetylates itself, adding acetyl groups to its own lysine residues, often affecting protein activity or stability.
self-acetylation, cis-acetylation, intrinsic acetyltransferase activity
deacetylation, heteroacetylation
histone modification, lysine acetylation, protein acetylation
Key References:
The process by which a protein removes methyl groups from itself through intrinsic demethylase activity, reversing the effects of methylation.
self-demethylation, intrinsic demethylase activity
automethylation, heteromethylation
protein methylation, demethylase activity, epigenetic regulation
Key References:
An E3 ubiquitin ligase attaches ubiquitin to itself, altering its stability, proteasomal targeting, and signaling functions depending on chain type and site.
self-ubiquitination, cis-ubiquitination, auto-ubiquitylation
deubiquitination, heteroubiquitination
protein degradation
Key References:
A gene product regulates transcription of the same gene through positive or negative feedback, tuning gene expression dynamics, noise, and homeostasis.
self-regulation, autonomous regulation, homeostatic control
heteroregulation, external regulation
homeostasis, feedback control
Key References:
Small diffusible molecules synthesized and detected by bacteria. Their accumulation with increasing cell density triggers coordinated community-wide transcriptional changes.
self-induction, auto-stimulation, positive feedback induction
autorepression, negative feedback
autoactivation, positive feedback
Key References:
Intrinsic structural interactions prevent inappropriate activation of a protein, maintaining it in an inactive state until relieved by ligand binding, structural rearrangement, or post-translational modification.
self-inhibition, negative autoregulation, self-repression
autoactivation, positive autoregulation
negative feedback, autorepression
Key References:
Self-degradation mediated by endogenous lytic enzymes, occurring during programmed cell death, post-mortem breakdown, or engineered microbial lysis systems.
self-cleavage, autocatalytic cleavage, self-proteolysis
heterolysis, trans-cleavage
autocatalysis
Key References:
SOORENA
SOORENA
Self-lOOp containing or autoREgulatory Nodes in biological network Analysis
SOORENA is a comprehensive database for exploring autoregulatory mechanisms in proteins. Our machine learning-powered platform analyzes millions of scientific publications to identify and classify autoregulatory protein mechanisms, providing researchers with unprecedented access to this critical biological information.
Department of Statistics
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, BC, Canada
Department of Biochemistry and Developmental Biology
University of Helsinki, Finland
Faculty of Medicine and Health Technology, Tampere University, Finland
Tampere Institute for Advanced Study, Finland
Department of Statistics
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, BC, Canada
Research Programs Unit
University of Helsinki
Helsinki, Finland
We would like to thank the following individuals for their valuable contributions to this project:
Zheng He • Yining Zhou • Mingyang Zhang