作者
S.K. Burley,Charmi Bhikadiya,Chunxiao Bi,Sebastian Bittrich,Li Chen,G.V. Crichlow,Cole H. Christie,Kenneth Dalenberg,L. Di Costanzo,José M. Duarte,Shuchismita Dutta,Zhang Feng,Sai J. Ganesan,David S. Goodsell,Sutapa Ghosh,Rachel Kramer Green,Vladimir Guranovic,Dmytro Guzenko,Brian P. Hudson,Catherine L. Lawson,Yu-He Liang,Robert Lowe,Harry Namkoong,Ezra Peisach,Irina Persikova,Christopher Randle,Alexander Rose,Yana Rose,Andrej Šali,Joan Segura,Monica Sekharan,Chenghua Shao,Yi-Ping Tao,Maria Voigt,John D. Westbrook,Jasmine Young,Christine Zardecki,Marina A. Zhuravleva
摘要
Abstract The Research Collaboratory for Structural Bioinformatics Protein Data Bank (RCSB PDB), the US data center for the global PDB archive and a founding member of the Worldwide Protein Data Bank partnership, serves tens of thousands of data depositors in the Americas and Oceania and makes 3D macromolecular structure data available at no charge and without restrictions to millions of RCSB.org users around the world, including >660 000 educators, students and members of the curious public using PDB101.RCSB.org. PDB data depositors include structural biologists using macromolecular crystallography, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, 3D electron microscopy and micro-electron diffraction. PDB data consumers accessing our web portals include researchers, educators and students studying fundamental biology, biomedicine, biotechnology, bioengineering and energy sciences. During the past 2 years, the research-focused RCSB PDB web portal (RCSB.org) has undergone a complete redesign, enabling improved searching with full Boolean operator logic and more facile access to PDB data integrated with >40 external biodata resources. New features and resources are described in detail using examples that showcase recently released structures of SARS-CoV-2 proteins and host cell proteins relevant to understanding and addressing the COVID-19 global pandemic.