20,078 Pathway/Genome Databases to Search
BioCyc is a collection of 20,078 Pathway/Genome Databases (PGDBs) for model eukaryotes and for thousands of microbes, plus software tools for exploring them. BioCyc is an encyclopedic reference that contains curated data from 153,000 publications, and is produced through an international collaboration.
The EcoCyc and Faecalibacterium prausnitzii A2-165 databases are freely available. Access to the other BioCyc databases requires a paid subscription.
The following websites are part of BioCyc. Opening these sites in your browser is a convenient way to pre-select that database for searches.
What people are saying
"BsubCyc is a tool of the utmost value."

Paul Babitzke
Prof. of Biochemistry
& Molecular Biology
"My lab uses these resources on a daily basis."

Patricia Kiley,
Professor and Chair,
Dep't. of Biomolecular Chemistry
"We rely on BioCyc's Gene Pages and Overview Diagrams almost daily."

Arkady Khodursky
Assoc. Prof. Biochemistry
"We use BioCyc and MetaCyc extensively to investigate the metabolic and regulatory processes of organisms we study."

William Cannon, Team Lead
Computational Biology
"BioCyc is the go-to resource of knowledge and tools for Ginkgo scientists."

"BioCyc is a tremendous resource for pathway analysis in metabolomics."

Art Edison, Dept of Genetics
"We make extensive use of the BioCyc full metabolic network diagram for omics data analysis."

Timothy J. Donohue, Director
"I have not found another database that has a better interface than BioCyc."

Gary B. Huffnagle, Professor
Microbiology and Immunology
Learning Library
Tutorial Videos
Tutorial #1: Introduction to BioCyc
Tutorial #2: Introduction to SmartTables
Tutorial #3: Zoomable Metabolic Map, Comparative Tools, Regulatory Network
Tutorial #4: Omics Data Analysis
Tutorial #5: Pathway Collages
Tutorial #6: Creating a Pathway/Genome Database
- Part 1A: Introduction to Database Building and Pathologic (14:04)
- Part 1B: Building a Database: Detailed Pathologic Example (23:53)
- Part 2A: General Editing Strategies (8:00)
- Part 2B: Creating and Editing Reactions and Compounds (17:32)
- Part 2C: Updating Proteins, Citations, GO Terms, and Enzymatic Reactions (26:10)
- Part 2D: Making and Editing Pathways (9:42)