Difference between revisions of "NCBI"

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Genbank is a publically accessible flat file database structure for primary nucleotide sequence information and auxillary information. The amount of information publically submitted has been growing exponentially. In August 2005 this DNA sequence database reached 100 gigabases. These records can display the [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Sitemap/samplerecord.html#OriginB ORIGIN] information for different nucleotide molecular types, and have no limit on the length of sequence displayed. Entire chromosomes can be stored as a genbank record for an organism of interest, potentially making the disk storage of the record very large.  
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Genbank is a publicly accessible flat file database structure for primary nucleotide sequence information and auxillary information. The amount of information publically submitted has been growing exponentially. In August 2005 this DNA sequence database reached 100 gigabases. These records can display the [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Sitemap/samplerecord.html#OriginB ORIGIN] information for different nucleotide molecular types, and have no limit on the length of sequence displayed. Entire chromosomes can be stored as a genbank record for an organism of interest, potentially making the disk storage of the record very large.  
  
 
An example Genbank [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Sitemap/samplerecord.html sample record] ''([http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/viewer.fcgi?db=nucleotide&val=1293613 U49845 actual Genbank record])''
 
An example Genbank [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Sitemap/samplerecord.html sample record] ''([http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/viewer.fcgi?db=nucleotide&val=1293613 U49845 actual Genbank record])''

Revision as of 10:44, 6 May 2007

Genbank is a publicly accessible flat file database structure for primary nucleotide sequence information and auxillary information. The amount of information publically submitted has been growing exponentially. In August 2005 this DNA sequence database reached 100 gigabases. These records can display the ORIGIN information for different nucleotide molecular types, and have no limit on the length of sequence displayed. Entire chromosomes can be stored as a genbank record for an organism of interest, potentially making the disk storage of the record very large.

An example Genbank sample record (U49845 actual Genbank record)

Regular expressions matching parts we care about

Genbank

FASTA

There is a condensed file format called a FASTA format is used to manipulate primary sequence information. FASTA files can be nucleotide or amino acid records. the first row of the record starts with a > and can contain any description information about the record. It is recommended that all lines of text be shorter than 80 characters in length.

An example of an amino acid FASTA record, in this case the description information is a consise format separated by pipe characters |. The first field gi refers to GENBANK IDENTIFIER, a unique identification number. The second field is the GENBANK IDENTIFIER number refering to the amino acid GENPEPT record.


>gi|532319|pir|TVFV2E|TVFV2E envelope protein

ELRLRYCAPAGFALLKCNDADYDGFKTNCSNVSVVHCTNLMNTTVTTGLLLNGSYSENRT

QIWQKHRTSNDSALILLNKHYNLTVTCKRPGNKTVLPVTIMAGLVFHSQKYNLRLRQAWC

HFPSNWKGAWKEVKEEIVNLPKERYRGTNDPKRIFFQRQWGDPETANLWFNCHGEFFYCK

MDWFLNYLNNLTVDADHNECKNTSGTKSGNKRAPGPCVQRTYVACHIRSVIIWLETISKK

TYAPPREGHLECTSTVTGMTVELNYIPKNRTNVTLSPQIESIWAAELDRYKLVEITPIGF

APTEVRRYTGGHERQKRVPFVXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXVQSQHLLAGILQQQKNL

LAAVEAQQQMLKLTIWGVK


In the U49845 actual FASTA record the third field is gb which refers to the GENBANK ACCESSION, a unique accession number. The fourth field is the GENBANK ACCESION number refering to the nucleotide GENBANK record.

See also