European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) : Hafiz.M.Zeeshan - Raza Research Associate - HEC - NRPU
European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) : Hafiz.M.Zeeshan - Raza Research Associate - HEC - NRPU
European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) : Hafiz.M.Zeeshan - Raza Research Associate - HEC - NRPU
(EMBL)
Hafiz.M.Zeeshan.Raza
Research Associate_HEC_NRPU
hafizraza26@gmail.com
• EBI (EMBL)
• Relational databases
INTRODUCTION
• The European Bioinformatics
Institute (EBI) is a center for research
and services in bioinformatics, and is
part of European Molecular Biology
Laboratory(EMBL)
• EMBL-EBI grew out of EMBL’s
pioneering work to provide public
biological database to research
community.
It is located on the Welcome Trust Genome
Campus in Hinxton, UK along with welcome
trust sanger institute.
BACKGROUND TO THE STUDY
• Founded in 1974, the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL)
now operates across five locations: “Heidelbery, Hamburg, Grenoble,
Monterotondo, and EMBL-EBI in Hinxton”.
• This data is then processed, incorporated into all relevant databases, classified,
annotated, and aligned with existing data to become a value-added resource.
• These resources are provided as defined services. The most strategically important
databases are accompanied by comprehensive tools and training.
• This allows scientists to share data, perform complex queries, and analyze results
in different ways. Scientists can work locally by downloading EMBL-EBI data and
software or use web services to access EMBL-EBI resources programmatically.
The EMBL Nucleotide Sequence database
• Each of these three groups collect a portion of the total sequence data reported world-
wide. All new and updated database entries are exchanged between the groups on a
daily basis.
• The ongoing collaboration with the European Patent Office has resulted in the capture
of nucleotide and protein sequences which were published in patent documents
between 1960 and 1993 and previously not publicly available in electronic form.
• A typical entry contains a sequence, a brief description for cataloging purposes, the
taxonomic description of the source organism, bibliographic information,
and the feature table, containing locations of coding regions and
other biologically significant sites.
The SWISS-PROT Protein Sequence database
• The entries created by each group are exchanged on a daily basis. The
remaining 5% are still extracted from the literature (especially patent
documents), which is a time-consuming and error-prone task.
EBI World Wide Web server
• The EBI WWW server provides the most advanced network
access to a broad range of molecular biology information resources.