TY - JOUR
T1 - STAR/mmCIF
T2 - An ontology for macromolecular structure
AU - Westbrook, John D.
AU - Bourne, Philip E.
N1 - Funding Information:
The development of the STAR/mmCIF standard has truly been a community effort. Most prominent and providing the greatest contributions to the work described in this paper are Paula Fitzgerald who was responsible for mmCIF dictionary development with assistance from Helen Berman who is now lead editor for new dictionary developments. Sid Hall carried out much of the pioneering work on STAR and Herbert Bernstein has been a key software developer in support of this effort. Finally, Brian McMahon has provided expertise on developing the standard on behalf of the IUCr. This work has benefited from the previous support of the National Science Foundation and the US Department of Energy.
PY - 2000/2
Y1 - 2000/2
N2 - Motivation: Crystallographers were motivated 10 years ago to develop a simple and consistent data representation for the exchange and archiving of data associated with the crystallographic experiment and the final structure. As this process evolved (and the data grew at near exponential rates) came the recognition that this representation should also facilitate the automated management of the data and, with the aid of additional software for verification and validation, provide improved consistency and accuracy and hence improved scientific inquiry. This realization led to a new Dictionary Definition Language (DDL) and an extensive dictionary based on this DDL for describing macromolecular structure. In broad terms this could be considered an ontology. An important feature in the development of the ontology was the endorsement and ongoing maintenance and support of the International Union of Crystallography (IUCr). While the description of macromolecular structure and the x-ray crystallographic experiment used to derive it represent explicit data, the ontology is extensible and applicable to other less well-characterized data domains. Results: Details of the DDL, the dictionaries that have been developed, and software for reading and using this ontology are presented. Availability: Extensive documentation, software tools and the DDL and dictionaries are available from http://ndbserve.rutgers.edu/mmcif and associated mirror sites. Contact: Bourne: [email protected] and Westbrook: [email protected].
AB - Motivation: Crystallographers were motivated 10 years ago to develop a simple and consistent data representation for the exchange and archiving of data associated with the crystallographic experiment and the final structure. As this process evolved (and the data grew at near exponential rates) came the recognition that this representation should also facilitate the automated management of the data and, with the aid of additional software for verification and validation, provide improved consistency and accuracy and hence improved scientific inquiry. This realization led to a new Dictionary Definition Language (DDL) and an extensive dictionary based on this DDL for describing macromolecular structure. In broad terms this could be considered an ontology. An important feature in the development of the ontology was the endorsement and ongoing maintenance and support of the International Union of Crystallography (IUCr). While the description of macromolecular structure and the x-ray crystallographic experiment used to derive it represent explicit data, the ontology is extensible and applicable to other less well-characterized data domains. Results: Details of the DDL, the dictionaries that have been developed, and software for reading and using this ontology are presented. Availability: Extensive documentation, software tools and the DDL and dictionaries are available from http://ndbserve.rutgers.edu/mmcif and associated mirror sites. Contact: Bourne: [email protected] and Westbrook: [email protected].
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U2 - 10.1093/bioinformatics/16.2.159
DO - 10.1093/bioinformatics/16.2.159
M3 - Article
C2 - 10842738
AN - SCOPUS:0034020917
SN - 1367-4803
VL - 16
SP - 159
EP - 168
JO - Bioinformatics
JF - Bioinformatics
IS - 2
ER -