Bioinformatics infrastructural activities are crucial to modern biological research. Complete and up-to-date databases of biological knowledge are vital for the increasingly information-dependent biological and biotechnological research. With the recent accumulation of genome sequences for many organisms, most notably the draft human sequence, attention is now turning to the identification and function of proteins encoded by these genomes. With the increasing volume and variety of protein sequences and functional information, a central database of protein sequence and function will provide a cornerstone for a wide range of scientists active in modern biological research, and here especially in the field of proteomics. Currently, several databases exist with different coverage of protein sequences and with various types of information annotated. A central resource is necessary to ensure that scientists receive rich and non-redundant information at a single location, and this is what the UniProt project wants to achieve by joining the forces of the SWISS-PROT, TrEMBL and PIR protein database activities The broad, long-term objective of the United Protein Databases (UniProt) can be summarized as the creation, maintenance and provision of a stable, comprehensive, fully classified, richly and accurately annotated protein sequence knowledgebase, with extensive cross-references and querying interfaces. The work will be built upon solid foundations laid by the three UniProt consortium members, SWlSS-PROT and TrEMBL at the European Bioinformatics Institute (EBI) and the Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics (SIB), and the Protein Information Resource (PIR) at Georgetown University Medical Center. UniProt will facilitate development of preventive and curative strategies for health maintenance by allowing researchers to integrate the enormous amount of data from the Human Genome Project and from structural and functional genomics and proteomics projects to understand the genetic and biological mechanisms causing human disease.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Type
Research Project--Cooperative Agreements (U01)
Project #
5U01HG002712-02
Application #
6668612
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZHG1-HGR-N (O3))
Program Officer
Good, Peter J
Project Start
2002-09-30
Project End
2005-08-31
Budget Start
2003-09-01
Budget End
2004-08-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2003
Total Cost
$5,109,300
Indirect Cost
Name
European Molecular Biology Laboratory
Department
Type
DUNS #
321691735
City
Heidelberg
State
Country
Germany
Zip Code
69117
Lopez, Rodrigo; Cowley, Andrew; Li, Weizhong et al. (2014) Using EMBL-EBI Services via Web Interface and Programmatically via Web Services. Curr Protoc Bioinformatics 48:3.12.1-50
Mutowo-Meullenet, Prudence; Huntley, Rachael P; Dimmer, Emily C et al. (2013) Use of Gene Ontology Annotation to understand the peroxisome proteome in humans. Database (Oxford) 2013:bas062
Hirschman, Lynette; Burns, Gully A P C; Krallinger, Martin et al. (2012) Text mining for the biocuration workflow. Database (Oxford) 2012:bas020
Burmester, Anke; Shelest, Ekaterina; Glöckner, Gernot et al. (2011) Comparative and functional genomics provide insights into the pathogenicity of dermatophytic fungi. Genome Biol 12:R7
Sriranganadane, Dev; Waridel, Patrice; Salamin, Karine et al. (2011) Identification of novel secreted proteases during extracellular proteolysis by dermatophytes at acidic pH. Proteomics 11:4422-33
Chen, Chuming; Natale, Darren A; Finn, Robert D et al. (2011) Representative proteomes: a stable, scalable and unbiased proteome set for sequence analysis and functional annotation. PLoS One 6:e18910
Vasudevan, Sona; Vinayaka, C R; Natale, Darren A et al. (2011) Structure-guided rule-based annotation of protein functional sites in UniProt Knowledgebase. Methods Mol Biol 694:91-105
UniProt Consortium (2011) Ongoing and future developments at the Universal Protein Resource. Nucleic Acids Res 39:D214-9
Magrane, Michele; UniProt Consortium (2011) UniProt Knowledgebase: a hub of integrated protein data. Database (Oxford) 2011:bar009
Hu, Zhang-Zhi; Huang, Hongzhan; Wu, Cathy H et al. (2011) Omics-based molecular target and biomarker identification. Methods Mol Biol 719:547-71

Showing the most recent 10 out of 58 publications