The
GenBank sequence database is an
open access, annotated collection of all publicly available
nucleotide sequences and their
protein translations. This database is produced and maintained by the
National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) as part of the
International Nucleotide Sequence Database Collaboration (INSDC). The
National Center for Biotechnology Information is a part of the
National Institutes of Health in the
United States. GenBank and its collaborators receive sequences produced in laboratories throughout the world from more than 100,000 distinct organisms. GenBank continues to grow at an
exponential rate, doubling every 18 months. Release 155, produced in August 2006, contained over 65 billion nucleotide bases in more than 61 million sequences. GenBank is built by direct submissions from individual laboratories, as well as from bulk submissions from large-scale sequencing centers.
Submissions
Direct submissions are made to GenBank using
BankIt, which is a Web-based form, or the stand-alone submission program,
Sequin. Upon receipt of a sequence submission, the GenBank staff assigns an
accession number to the sequence and performs quality assurance checks. The submissions are then released to the public database, where the entries are retrievable by
Entrez or downloadable by . Bulk submissions of
Expressed Sequence Tag (EST),
Sequence-tagged site (STS),
Genome Survey Sequence (GSS), and
High-Throughput Genome Sequence (HTGS) data are most often submitted by large-scale sequencing centers. The GenBank direct submissions group also processes complete microbial genome sequences.
History
Walter Goad of the
Theoretical Biology and Biophysics Group at
Los Alamos National Laboratory and others established the Los Alamos Sequence Database in 1979, which culminated in 1982 with the creation of the public GenBank. Funding was provided by the
National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy, and the Department of Defense. LANL collaborated on GenBank with the firm
Bolt, Beranek, and Newman, and by the end of 1983 more than 2,000 sequences were stored in it.
In the mid 1980s, the Intelligenetics bioinformatics company at Stanford University managed the GenBank project in collaboration with LANL. As one of the earliest bioinformatics community projects on the Internet, the GenBank project started BIOSCI/Bionet news groups for promoting open access communications among bioscientists. During 1989 to 1992, the GenBank project transitioned to the newly created National Center for Biotechnology Information.
Growth
The GenBank
release notes for release 162.0 (October 2007) state that "from 1982 to the present, the number of bases in GenBank has doubled approximately every 18 months". The following plot clearly shows the
exponential growth (on a
semi-log scale such as this, a straight line represents an exponential change).
, GenBank 179.0 has 122,941,883 loci, 117,476,523,128 bases, from 122,941,883 reported sequences.
The GenBank database includes additional data sets which are constructed mechanically from the main sequence data collection, and therefore are excluded from this count.
See also
Ensembl
HPRD
Sequence analysis
Sequence profiling tool
Sequence motif
UniProt
List of sequenced eukaryotic genomes
List of sequenced archeal genomes
RefSeq - the Reference Sequence Database
References
External links
GenBank
Example sequence record, for hemoglobin beta
BankIt
Sequin
Emboss
GenBank, RefSeq, TPA and UniProt: What’s in a Name?
GenBank File-Format Converter
Category: National Institutes of Health
Category:Biological databases