Database Commons
Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

Genome3D

General information

URL: http://www.genome3d.eu/
Full name: Annotating Genomes with Structures
Description: Genome3D provides consensus structural annotations and 3D models for sequences from model organisms, including human. In the latest version Genome3D v2.1, all the submission data can be 'pushed' to the database via an API, making it more convenient and flexible for contributing groups to manage their own structure annotations.
Year founded: 2010
Last update: 2020-01-08
Version: v2.1
Accessibility:
Accessible
Country/Region: United Kingdom

Contact information

University/Institution: Institute of Structural and Molecular Biology
Address: UCL,636 Darwin Building, Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT, UK
City: London
Province/State:
Country/Region: United Kingdom
Contact name (PI/Team): Ian Sillitoe
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): i.sillitoe@ucl.ac.uk

Publications

31733063
Genome3D: integrating a collaborative data pipeline to expand the depth and breadth of consensus protein structure annotation. [PMID: 31733063]
Sillitoe I, Andreeva A, Blundell TL, Buchan DWA, Finn RD, Gough J, Jones D, Kelley LA, Paysan-Lafosse T, Lam SD, Murzin AG, Pandurangan AP, Salazar GA, Skwark MJ, Sternberg MJE, Velankar S, Orengo C.

Genome3D (https://www.genome3d.eu) is a freely available resource that provides consensus structural annotations for representative protein sequences taken from a selection of model organisms. Since the last NAR update in 2015, the method of data submission has been overhauled, with annotations now being 'pushed' to the database via an API. As a result, contributing groups are now able to manage their own structural annotations, making the resource more flexible and maintainable. The new submission protocol brings a number of additional benefits including: providing instant validation of data and avoiding the requirement to synchronise releases between resources. It also makes it possible to implement the submission of these structural annotations as an automated part of existing internal workflows. In turn, these improvements facilitate Genome3D being opened up to new prediction algorithms and groups. For the latest release of Genome3D (v2.1), the underlying dataset of sequences used as prediction targets has been updated using the latest reference proteomes available in UniProtKB. A number of new reference proteomes have also been added of particular interest to the wider scientific community: cow, pig, wheat and mycobacterium tuberculosis. These additions, along with improvements to the underlying predictions from contributing resources, has ensured that the number of annotations in Genome3D has nearly doubled since the last NAR update article. The new API has also been used to facilitate the dissemination of Genome3D data into InterPro, thereby widening the visibility of both the annotation data and annotation algorithms.

Nucleic Acids Res. 2020:48(D1) | 12 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-13)
23203986
Genome3D: a UK collaborative project to annotate genomic sequences with predicted 3D structures based on SCOP and CATH domains. [PMID: 23203986]
Lewis TE, Sillitoe I, Andreeva A, Blundell TL, Buchan DW, Chothia C, Cuff A, Dana JM, Filippis I, Gough J, Hunter S, Jones DT, Kelley LA, Kleywegt GJ, Minneci F, Mitchell A, Murzin AG, Ochoa-MontaƱo B, Rackham OJ, Smith J, Sternberg MJ, Velankar S, Yeats C, Orengo C.

Genome3D, available at http://www.genome3d.eu, is a new collaborative project that integrates UK-based structural resources to provide a unique perspective on sequence-structure-function relationships. Leading structure prediction resources (DomSerf, FUGUE, Gene3D, pDomTHREADER, Phyre and SUPERFAMILY) provide annotations for UniProt sequences to indicate the locations of structural domains (structural annotations) and their 3D structures (structural models). Structural annotations and 3D model predictions are currently available for three model genomes (Homo sapiens, E. coli and baker's yeast), and the project will extend to other genomes in the near future. As these resources exploit different strategies for predicting structures, the main aim of Genome3D is to enable comparisons between all the resources so that biologists can see where predictions agree and are therefore more trusted. Furthermore, as these methods differ in whether they build their predictions using CATH or SCOP, Genome3D also contains the first official mapping between these two databases. This has identified pairs of similar superfamilies from the two resources at various degrees of consensus (532 bronze pairs, 527 silver pairs and 370 gold pairs).

Nucleic Acids Res. 2013:41(Database issue) | 41 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-13)
20813045
Genome3D: a viewer-model framework for integrating and visualizing multi-scale epigenomic information within a three-dimensional genome. [PMID: 20813045]
Asbury TM, Mitman M, Tang J, Zheng WJ.

New technologies are enabling the measurement of many types of genomic and epigenomic information at scales ranging from the atomic to nuclear. Much of this new data is increasingly structural in nature, and is often difficult to coordinate with other data sets. There is a legitimate need for integrating and visualizing these disparate data sets to reveal structural relationships not apparent when looking at these data in isolation. We have applied object-oriented technology to develop a downloadable visualization tool, Genome3D, for integrating and displaying epigenomic data within a prescribed three-dimensional physical model of the human genome. In order to integrate and visualize large volume of data, novel statistical and mathematical approaches have been developed to reduce the size of the data. To our knowledge, this is the first such tool developed that can visualize human genome in three-dimension. We describe here the major features of Genome3D and discuss our multi-scale data framework using a representative basic physical model. We then demonstrate many of the issues and benefits of multi-resolution data integration. Genome3D is a software visualization tool that explores a wide range of structural genomic and epigenetic data. Data from various sources of differing scales can be integrated within a hierarchical framework that is easily adapted to new developments concerning the structure of the physical genome. In addition, our tool has a simple annotation mechanism to incorporate non-structural information. Genome3D is unique is its ability to manipulate large amounts of multi-resolution data from diverse sources to uncover complex and new structural relationships within the genome.

BMC Bioinformatics. 2010:11() | 19 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-13)

Ranking

All databases:
2460/6895 (64.336%)
Structure:
343/967 (64.633%)
2460
Total Rank
72
Citations
4.8
z-index

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Record metadata

Created on: 2015-06-20
Curated by:
Zhao Li [2020-11-19]
Lin Liu [2016-03-29]
Lin Liu [2016-03-25]
Jian Sang [2015-12-05]
Zhang Zhang [2015-06-29]
Jian Sang [2015-06-28]