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Featured researches published by Swanand Gore.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

PDBe: Protein Data Bank in Europe

Sameer Velankar; Y. Alhroub; C. Best; S. Caboche; M. J. Conroy; Jose M. Dana; M. A. Fernandez Montecelo; G. van Ginkel; A. Golovin; Swanand Gore; Aleksandras Gutmanas; P. Haslam; P. M. S. Hendrickx; E. Heuson; M. Hirshberg; M. John; I. Lagerstedt; S. Mir; L. E. Newman; Thomas J. Oldfield; Ardan Patwardhan; L. Rinaldi; G. Sahni; E. Sanz-García; Sanchayita Sen; R. Slowley; A. Suarez-Uruena; G. J. Swaminathan; M. F. Symmons; Wim F. Vranken

The Protein Data Bank in Europe (PDBe; pdbe.org) is a partner in the Worldwide PDB organization (wwPDB; wwpdb.org) and as such actively involved in managing the single global archive of biomacromolecular structure data, the PDB. In addition, PDBe develops tools, services and resources to make structure-related data more accessible to the biomedical community. Here we describe recently developed, extended or improved services, including an animated structure-presentation widget (PDBportfolio), a widget to graphically display the coverage of any UniProt sequence in the PDB (UniPDB), chemistry- and taxonomy-based PDB-archive browsers (PDBeXplore), and a tool for interactive visualization of NMR structures, corresponding experimental data as well as validation and analysis results (Vivaldi).


Bioinformatics | 2013

BioJS: an open source JavaScript framework for biological data visualization.

John Gomez; Leyla Garcia; Gustavo A. Salazar; Jose M. Villaveces; Swanand Gore; Alexander Garcia; María Martín; Guillaume Launay; Rafael Alcántara; Noemi del-Toro; Marine Dumousseau; Sandra Orchard; Sameer Velankar; Henning Hermjakob; Chenggong Zong; Peipei Ping; Manuel Corpas; Rafael C. Jimenez

SUMMARY BioJS is an open-source project whose main objective is the visualization of biological data in JavaScript. BioJS provides an easy-to-use consistent framework for bioinformatics application programmers. It follows a community-driven standard specification that includes a collection of components purposely designed to require a very simple configuration and installation. In addition to the programming framework, BioJS provides a centralized repository of components available for reutilization by the bioinformatics community. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION http://code.google.com/p/biojs/. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

PDBe: improved accessibility of macromolecular structure data from PDB and EMDB

Sameer Velankar; Glen van Ginkel; Younes Alhroub; Gary M. Battle; John M. Berrisford; Matthew J. Conroy; Jose M. Dana; Swanand Gore; Aleksandras Gutmanas; Pauline Haslam; Pieter M. S. Hendrickx; Ingvar Lagerstedt; Saqib Mir; Manuel A. Fernandez Montecelo; Abhik Mukhopadhyay; Thomas J. Oldfield; Ardan Patwardhan; Eduardo Sanz-García; Sanchayita Sen; Robert A. Slowley; Michael E. Wainwright; Mandar Deshpande; Andrii Iudin; Gaurav Sahni; José Salavert Torres; Miriam Hirshberg; Lora Mak; Nurul Nadzirin; David R. Armstrong; Alice R. Clark

The Protein Data Bank in Europe (http://pdbe.org) accepts and annotates depositions of macromolecular structure data in the PDB and EMDB archives and enriches, integrates and disseminates structural information in a variety of ways. The PDBe website has been redesigned based on an analysis of user requirements, and now offers intuitive access to improved and value-added macromolecular structure information. Unique value-added information includes lists of reviews and research articles that cite or mention PDB entries as well as access to figures and legends from full-text open-access publications that describe PDB entries. A powerful new query system not only shows all the PDB entries that match a given query, but also shows the ‘best structures’ for a given macromolecule, ligand complex or sequence family using data-quality information from the wwPDB validation reports. A PDBe RESTful API has been developed to provide unified access to macromolecular structure data available in the PDB and EMDB archives as well as value-added annotations, e.g. regarding structure quality and up-to-date cross-reference information from the SIFTS resource. Taken together, these new developments facilitate unified access to macromolecular structure data in an intuitive way for non-expert users and support expert users in analysing macromolecular structure data.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2012

Implementing an X-ray validation pipeline for the Protein Data Bank

Swanand Gore; Sameer Velankar; Gerard J. Kleywegt

The implementation of a validation pipeline, based on community recommendations, for future depositions of X-ray crystal structures in the Protein Data Bank is described.


Structure | 2017

OneDep: Unified wwPDB System for Deposition, Biocuration, and Validation of Macromolecular Structures in the PDB Archive

Jasmine Young; John D. Westbrook; Zukang Feng; Raul Sala; Ezra Peisach; Thomas J. Oldfield; Sanchayita Sen; Aleksandras Gutmanas; David R. Armstrong; John M. Berrisford; Li Chen; Minyu Chen; Luigi Di Costanzo; Dimitris Dimitropoulos; Guanghua Gao; Sutapa Ghosh; Swanand Gore; Vladimir Guranovic; Pieter M. S. Hendrickx; Brian P. Hudson; Reiko Igarashi; Yasuyo Ikegawa; Naohiro Kobayashi; Catherine L. Lawson; Yuhe Liang; Steve Mading; Lora Mak; M. Saqib Mir; Abhik Mukhopadhyay; Ardan Patwardhan

OneDep, a unified system for deposition, biocuration, and validation of experimentally determined structures of biological macromolecules to the PDB archive, has been developed as a global collaboration by the worldwide PDB (wwPDB) partners. This new system was designed to ensure that the wwPDB could meet the evolving archiving requirements of the scientific community over the coming decades. OneDep unifies deposition, biocuration, and validation pipelines across all wwPDB, EMDB, and BMRB deposition sites with improved focus on data quality and completeness in these archives, while supporting growth in the number of depositions and increases in their average size and complexity. In this paper, we describe the design, functional operation, and supporting infrastructure of the OneDep system, and provide initial performance assessments.


Structure | 2017

Validation of Structures in the Protein Data Bank

Swanand Gore; Eduardo Sanz García; Pieter M. S. Hendrickx; Aleksandras Gutmanas; John D. Westbrook; Huanwang Yang; Zukang Feng; Kumaran Baskaran; John M. Berrisford; Brian P. Hudson; Yasuyo Ikegawa; Naohiro Kobayashi; Catherine L. Lawson; Steve Mading; Lora Mak; Abhik Mukhopadhyay; Thomas J. Oldfield; Ardan Patwardhan; Ezra Peisach; Gaurav Sahni; Monica Sekharan; Sanchayita Sen; Chenghua Shao; Oliver S. Smart; Eldon L. Ulrich; Reiko Yamashita; Martha Quesada; Jasmine Young; Haruki Nakamura; John L. Markley

Summary The Worldwide PDB recently launched a deposition, biocuration, and validation tool: OneDep. At various stages of OneDep data processing, validation reports for three-dimensional structures of biological macromolecules are produced. These reports are based on recommendations of expert task forces representing crystallography, nuclear magnetic resonance, and cryoelectron microscopy communities. The reports provide useful metrics with which depositors can evaluate the quality of the experimental data, the structural model, and the fit between them. The validation module is also available as a stand-alone web server and as a programmatically accessible web service. A growing number of journals require the official wwPDB validation reports (produced at biocuration) to accompany manuscripts describing macromolecular structures. Upon public release of the structure, the validation report becomes part of the public PDB archive. Geometric quality scores for proteins in the PDB archive have improved over the past decade.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2005

PRODOC : a resource for the comparison of tethered protein domain architectures with in-built information on remotely related domain families

Oruganty Krishnadev; Nambudiry Rekha; Shashi B. Pandit; S. Abhiman; Smita Mohanty; Lakshmipuram S. Swapna; Swanand Gore; Narayanaswamy Srinivasan

PROtein Domain Organization and Comparison (PRODOC) comprises several programs that enable convenient comparison of proteins as a sequence of domains. The in-built dataset currently consists of ∼698 000 proteins from 192 organisms with complete genomic data, and all the SWISSPROT proteins obtained from the Pfam database. All the entries in PRODOC are represented as a sequence of functional domains, assigned using hidden Markov models, instead of as a sequence of amino acids. On average 69% of the proteins in the proteomes and 49% of the residues are covered by functional domain assignments. Software tools allow the user to query the dataset with a sequence of domains and identify proteins with the same or a jumbled or circularly permuted arrangement of domains. As it is proposed that proteins with jumbled or the same domain sequences have similar functions, this search tool is useful in assigning the overall function of a multi-domain protein. Unique features of PRODOC include the generation of alignments between multi-domain proteins on the basis of the sequence of domains and in-built information on distantly related domain families forming superfamilies. It is also possible using PRODOC to identify domain sharing and gene fusion events across organisms. An exhaustive genome–genome comparison tool in PRODOC also enables the detection of successive domain sharing and domain fusion events across two organisms. The tool permits the identification of gene clusters involved in similar biological processes in two closely related organisms. The URL for PRODOC is .


Acta Crystallographica Section D Structural Biology | 2018

Worldwide Protein Data Bank validation information: usage and trends

Oliver S. Smart; V. Horský; Swanand Gore; R. Svobodová Vařeková; Veronika Bendová; Gerard J. Kleywegt; Sameer Velankar

The use of validation metrics to rank macromolecular structures, as well as a web tool to investigate trends in and correlations between different properties and validation metrics, are described.


Acta Crystallographica Section D Structural Biology | 2018

Validation of ligands in macromolecular structures determined by X-ray crystallography

Oliver S. Smart; Vladimír Horský; Swanand Gore; R. Svobodová Vařeková; Veronika Bendová; Gerard J. Kleywegt; Sameer Velankar

Better metrics are required to be able to assess small-molecule ligands in macromolecular structures in Worldwide Protein Data Bank validation reports. The local ligand density fit (LLDF) score currently used to assess ligand electron-density fit outliers produces a substantial number of false positives and false negatives.


Database | 2018

Worldwide Protein Data Bank biocuration supporting open access to high-quality 3D structural biology data

Jasmine Young; John D. Westbrook; Zukang Feng; Ezra Peisach; Irina Persikova; Raul Sala; Sanchayita Sen; John M. Berrisford; Jawahar Swaminathan; Thomas J. Oldfield; Aleksandras Gutmanas; Reiko Igarashi; David R. Armstrong; Kumaran Baskaran; Li Chen; Minyu Chen; Alice R. Clark; Luigi Di Costanzo; Dimitris Dimitropoulos; Guanghua Gao; Sutapa Ghosh; Swanand Gore; Vladimir Guranovic; Pieter M. S. Hendrickx; Brian P. Hudson; Yasuyo Ikegawa; Yumiko Kengaku; Catherine L. Lawson; Yuhe Liang; Lora Mak

Abstract The Protein Data Bank (PDB) is the single global repository for experimentally determined 3D structures of biological macromolecules and their complexes with ligands. The worldwide PDB (wwPDB) is the international collaboration that manages the PDB archive according to the FAIR principles: Findability, Accessibility, Interoperability and Reusability. The wwPDB recently developed OneDep, a unified tool for deposition, validation and biocuration of structures of biological macromolecules. All data deposited to the PDB undergo critical review by wwPDB Biocurators. This article outlines the importance of biocuration for structural biology data deposited to the PDB and describes wwPDB biocuration processes and the role of expert Biocurators in sustaining a high-quality archive. Structural data submitted to the PDB are examined for self-consistency, standardized using controlled vocabularies, cross-referenced with other biological data resources and validated for scientific/technical accuracy. We illustrate how biocuration is integral to PDB data archiving, as it facilitates accurate, consistent and comprehensive representation of biological structure data, allowing efficient and effective usage by research scientists, educators, students and the curious public worldwide. Database URL: https://www.wwpdb.org/

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Sameer Velankar

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Sanchayita Sen

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Aleksandras Gutmanas

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Pieter M. S. Hendrickx

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Thomas J. Oldfield

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Ardan Patwardhan

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Gerard J. Kleywegt

European Bioinformatics Institute

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