@prefix dcterms: .
@prefix this: .
@prefix sub: .
@prefix beldoc: .
@prefix rdfs: .
@prefix rdf: .
@prefix xsd: .
@prefix dce: .
@prefix pav: .
@prefix np: .
@prefix belv: .
@prefix prov: .
@prefix Protein: .
@prefix hgnc: .
@prefix geneProductOf: .
@prefix species: .
@prefix occursIn: .
@prefix obo: .
@prefix pubmed: .
@prefix orcid: .
sub:Head {
this: np:hasAssertion sub:assertion;
np:hasProvenance sub:provenance;
np:hasPublicationInfo sub:pubinfo;
a np:Nanopublication .
}
sub:assertion {
sub:_1 geneProductOf: hgnc:8799;
a Protein: .
sub:_2 geneProductOf: hgnc:3778;
a Protein: .
sub:_3 occursIn: obo:CL_0000115, obo:UBERON_0005396, species:9606;
rdf:object sub:_2;
rdf:predicate belv:increases;
rdf:subject sub:_1;
a rdf:Statement .
sub:assertion rdfs:label "p(HGNC:PDGFA) -> p(HGNC:FN1)" .
}
sub:provenance {
beldoc: dce:description "Approximately 61,000 statements.";
dce:rights "Copyright (c) 2011-2012, Selventa. All rights reserved.";
dce:title "BEL Framework Large Corpus Document";
pav:authoredBy sub:_5;
pav:version "20131211" .
sub:_4 prov:value "E. Wound Healing Platelet-derived growth factor acts on several cell types involved in wound healing. It stimulates mitogenicity and chemotaxis of fibroblasts and smooth muscle cells and chemotaxis of neutrophils and macrophages (reviewed in Ref. 183). It also stimulates macrophages to produce and secrete other growth factors of importance for various phases in the healing process. Moreover, PDGF has been shown to stimulate production of several matrix molecules, like fibronectin (52), collagen (72), proteoglycans (417), and hyaluronic acid (185).";
prov:wasQuotedFrom pubmed:10508235 .
sub:_5 rdfs:label "Selventa" .
sub:assertion prov:hadPrimarySource pubmed:10508235;
prov:wasDerivedFrom beldoc:, sub:_4 .
}
sub:pubinfo {
this: dcterms:created "2014-07-03T14:31:32.109+02:00"^^xsd:dateTime;
pav:createdBy orcid:0000-0001-6818-334X, orcid:0000-0002-1267-0234 .
}