EMDB—the Electron Microscopy Data Bank
2023; Oxford University Press; Volume: 52; Issue: D1 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1093/nar/gkad1019
ISSN1362-4962
AutoresJack Turner, Sanja Abbott, Neli Fonseca, Ryan Pye, Lucas Carrijo, Amudha Kumari Duraisamy, Osman Salih, Zhe Wang, Gerard J. Kleywegt, Kyle L. Morris, Ardan Patwardhan, S.K. Burley, G.V. Crichlow, Zukang Feng, Justin W. Flatt, Sutapa Ghosh, Brian P. Hudson, Catherine L. Lawson, Yu‐He Liang, Ezra Peisach, Irina Persikova, Monica Sekharan, Chenghua Shao, Jasmine Young, Sameer Velankar, David Armstrong, Marcus Bage, Wesley Morellato Bueno, Genevieve L. Evans, Romana Gáborová, Sudakshina Ganguly, Deepti Gupta, Déborah Harrus, Ahsan Tanweer, Manju Bansal, Vetriselvi Rangannan, Genji Kurisu, Hasumi Cho, Yasuyo Ikegawa, Yumiko Kengaku, Ju Yaen Kim, Satomi Niwa, Sato Junko, Ayako Takuwa, Jian Yu, Jeffrey C. Hoch, Kumaran Baskaran, Wenqing Xu, Weizhe Zhang, Xiaodan Ma,
Tópico(s)Genomics and Phylogenetic Studies
ResumoThe Electron Microscopy Data Bank (EMDB) is the global public archive of three-dimensional electron microscopy (3DEM) maps of biological specimens derived from transmission electron microscopy experiments. As of 2021, EMDB is managed by the Worldwide Protein Data Bank consortium (wwPDB; wwpdb.org) as a wwPDB Core Archive, and the EMDB team is a core member of the consortium. Today, EMDB houses over 30 000 entries with maps containing macromolecules, complexes, viruses, organelles and cells. Herein, we provide an overview of the rapidly growing EMDB archive, including its current holdings, recent updates, and future plans.
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