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Protein Data Bank Archives
50,000th Molecule Structure
The
Protein Data Bank (PDB) based at Rutgers, The State University of New
Jersey, and the University of California-San Diego (UCSD) this month
reached a significant milestone in its 37-year history. The 50,000th
molecule structure was released into its archive, joining other
structures vital to pharmacology, bioinformatics and education.With its
origins in a handwritten petition circulated at a scientific meeting,
the PDB is the single worldwide repository for the three-dimensional
structures of large molecules and nucleic acids.
(Credit:
Protein Data Bank and David Goodsell)
This freely available online library allows biological researchers and students to study,
store and share molecular information on a global scale.
Officially founded in 1971 with seven structures at
Brookhaven National Laboratory, the archive is managed by a consortium
called the worldwide Protein Data Bank (wwPDB).
Today, the PDB archive receives approximately 25 new
experimentally determined structures from scientists each day -- and
more than 5 million files are downloaded from the PDB archive every
month. Users include structural biologists, computational biologists,
biochemists, and molecular biologists in academia, government and
industry as well as educators and students.
Notable examples include recent structures of the
adrenergic receptor, which will revolutionize the discovery of drugs to
fight heart disease, allergies and numerous other diseases, and the
structures of many enzymes from HIV, which have been pivotal in the
design of new therapies to fight AIDS.
"Advances in science and technology have helped the
archive grow by leaps and bounds in the last 10 years," said Helen M.
Berman, director of the RCSB PDB and Rutgers Board of Governors
professor of chemistry and chemical biology, noting that the size of the
PDB has doubled in just the last three and a half years.
"We are estimating that the PDB will not only double but
triple to 150,000 structures by 2014," said Philip E. Bourne, associate
director of the RCSB PDB and professor of pharmacology at the UCSD
Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences.
The RCSB PDB, based at Rutgers University and the UCSD,
is responsible for releasing PDB entries into the archive after they
have been reviewed and annotated. At Rutgers, RCSB PDB members annotate
structures and develop the sophisticated infrastructure needed to handle
these complex data. The primary FTP site is based at SDSC, which serves
as the distribution point for users.
The RCSB PDB presents a comprehensive website and
database that lets users search, analyze and visualize the structures of
biological macromolecules and their relationships to sequence, function
and disease. In addition, it features a Molecule of the Month series,
which recently published its 100th installment (see accompanying
illustrations).
Proteins, one of the main building blocks for living
organisms, come in a variety of shapes, with the form of a protein
corresponding to its function. The structures housed in the PDB
demonstrate great diversity in size, complexity and function, including:
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