10 research outputs found

    Integration of open access literature into the RCSB Protein Data Bank using BioLit

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Biological data have traditionally been stored and made publicly available through a variety of on-line databases, whereas biological knowledge has traditionally been found in the printed literature. With journals now on-line and providing an increasing amount of open access content, often free of copyright restriction, this distinction between database and literature is blurring. To exploit this opportunity we present the integration of open access literature with the RCSB Protein Data Bank (PDB).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>BioLit provides an enhanced view of articles with markup of semantic data and links to biological databases, based on the content of the article. For example, words matching to existing biological ontologies are highlighted and database identifiers are linked to their database of origin. Among other functions, it identifies PDB IDs that are mentioned in the open access literature, by parsing the full text for all research articles in PubMed Central (PMC) and exposing the results as simple XML Web Services. Here, we integrate BioLit results with the RCSB PDB website by using these services to find PDB IDs that are mentioned in research articles and subsequently retrieving abstract, figures, and text excerpts for those articles. A new RCSB PDB literature view permits browsing through the figures and abstracts of the articles that mention a given structure. The BioLit Web Services that are providing the underlying data are publicly accessible. A client library is provided that supports querying these services (Java).</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The integration between literature and websites, as demonstrated here with the RCSB PDB, provides a broader view for how a given structure has been analyzed and used. This approach detects the mention of a PDB structure even if it is not formally cited in the paper. Other structures related through the same literature references can also be identified, possibly providing new scientific insight. To our knowledge this is the first time that database and literature have been integrated in this way and it speaks to the opportunities afforded by open and free access to both database and literature content.</p

    Sequence and structure comparison tool widget.

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    <p>The widget on the left is generated by the Javascript code on the right. Only the pointer (src) to the js file is required, the other lines allow the user to customize the look and feel of the widget to match their own Web page.</p

    Semantic tagging.

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    <p>The box labeled usage shows how these tags are used in the html document. On the left is such a Web page (in italics) that has been semantically tagged. The Web page was created by David Goodsell as part of the RCSB PDB “Molecule of the Month” feature.</p
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