1. GenBank: The Nucleotide Sequence Database
}Yp]A Ilene Mizrachi
5VW*h Created: October 9, 2002
z#sSLE.$Z Updated: August 22, 2007
N9cUlrDO Summary
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The GenBank sequence database is an annotated collection of all publicly available nucleotide
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sequences and their protein translations. This database is produced at National Center for
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K}&3 Biotechnology Information (NCBI) as part of an international collaboration with the European Molecular
"_e/O&-cH Biology Laboratory (EMBL) Data Library from the European Bioinformatics Institute (EBI) and the DNA
?:sQ]S/Er Data Bank of Japan (DDBJ). GenBank and its collaborators receive sequences produced in
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.N\/ laboratories throughout the world from more than 100,000 distinct organisms. GenBank continues to
#[Vk#BIiv8 grow at an exponential rate, doubling every 10 months. Release 134, produced in February 2003,
u\|Ys contained over 29.3 billion nucleotide bases in more than 23.0 million sequences. GenBank is built
N^K@$bs4^ by direct submissions from individual laboratories, as well as from bulk submissions from large-scale
X.!|#FWb+ sequencing centers.
yS(tF`H[ Direct submissions are made to GenBank using BankIt [
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BankIt/],
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which is a Web-based form, or the stand-alone submission program, Sequin [http://
D[}qhDlX www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Sequin/index.html]. Upon receipt of a sequence submission, the GenBank staff
qct:xviH<| assigns an Accession number to the sequence and performs quality assurance checks. The
d/`Q,Vl submissions are then released to the public database, where the entries are retrievable by Entrez or
4';(\42 downloadable by FTP. Bulk submissions of Expressed Sequence Tag (EST), Sequence Tagged Site
NKb,>TO (STS), Genome Survey Sequence (GSS), and High-Throughput Genome Sequence (HTGS) data are
{H%1sI most often submitted by large-scale sequencing centers. The GenBank direct submissions group also
Kzgnhgc processes complete microbial genome sequences.
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L History
6,;7iA] Initially, GenBank was built and maintained at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL). In the early
@^kt[$X; 1990s, this responsibility was awarded to NCBI through congressional mandate. NCBI undertook
S?Z"){ the task of scanning the literature for sequences and manually typing the sequences into the data-
itW~2#nJz base. Staff then added annotation to these records, based upon information in the published article.
j-j,0!T~b Scanning sequences from the literature and placing them into GenBank is now a rare occurrence.
YE\s<$ Nearly all of the sequences are now deposited directly by the labs that generate the sequences.
YX:[],FP This is attributable to, in part, a requirement by most journal publishers that nucleotide sequences
9n[ovX 7n! are first deposited into publicly available databases (DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank) so that the Accession
b^]@8I[M number can be cited and the sequence can be retrieved when the article is published. NCBI began
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<i!7f26r D/-$~u_o NCBI Handbook GenBank
u$?t |Ll accepting direct submissions to GenBank in 1993 and received data from LANL until 1996. Cur-
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s)Nz< d rently, NCBI receives and processes about 20,000 direct submission sequences per month, in
sAz]8(Fi0 addition to the approximately 200,000 bulk submissions that are processed automatically.
" ~&d=f0m International Collaboration
52JtEt7E In the mid-1990s, the GenBank database became part of the International Nucleotide Sequence
\6U$kMGde Database Collaboration with the EMBL database (European Bioinformatics Institute [http://
@(mXiK www.ebi.ac.uk/], Hinxton, United Kingdom) and the Genome Sequence Database (GSDB; LANL,
A(Ss:7({ Los Alamos, NM). Subsequently, the GSDB was removed from the Collaboration (by the National
oH|<(8efD Center for Genome Resources, Santa Fe, NM), and DDBJ [
http://www.ddbj.nig.ac.jp/] (Mishima,
#n8jn# Japan) joined the group. Each database has its own set of submission and retrieval tools, but the
gP?uLnzvi three databases exchange data daily so that all three databases should contain the same set of
1ZF>e`t8 sequences. Members of the DDBJ, EMBL, and GenBank staff meet annually to discuss technical
b:w {7 issues, and an international advisory board meets with the database staff to provide additional
M'4$z^@Z guidance. An entry can only be updated by the database that initially prepared it to avoid conflicting
7pY7iR_ data at the three sites.
1k8zAtuj The Collaboration created a Feature Table Definition [
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/collab/FT/ oG_-a(N index.html] that outlines legal features and syntax for the DDBJ, EMBL, and GenBank feature tables.
41[1_ p( The purpose of this document is to standardize annotation across the databases. The presentation
<8Zm}-U and format of the data are different in the three databases, however, the underlying biological infor-
f2"1^M mation is the same.
Mh+ym]6\(k Confidentiality of Data
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$MT6 When scientists submit data to GenBank, they have the opportunity to keep their data confidential
/.u0rxoRP} for a specified period of time. This helps to allay concerns that the availability of their data in Gen-
?Hd/!I& Bank before publication may compromise their work. When the article containing the citation of the
NdW2OUxw" sequence or its Accession number is published, the sequence record is released. The database
c=}#8d. staff request that submitters notify GenBank of the date of publication so that the sequence can be
O*ql!9}E{ released without delay. The request to release should be sent to
gb-admin@ncbi.nlm.nih.gov.
8sG0HI$f+ Direct Submissions
2yyJ19Iul The typical GenBank submission consists of a single, contiguous stretch of DNA or RNA sequence
dSkW[r9Z%l with annotations. The annotations are meant to provide an adequate representation of the biological
f/Lyc=-] information in the record. The GenBank Feature Table Definition [
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/col- FesXY856E lab/FT/index.html] describes the various features and subsequent qualifiers agreed upon by the
J}9 I5O International Nucleotide Sequence Database Collaboration.
X. =% Currently, only nucleotide sequences are accepted for direct submission to GenBank. These
mQ@A3/= ` include mRNA sequences with coding regions, fragments of genomic DNA with a single gene or
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7_u9lz2 multiple genes, and ribosomal RNA gene clusters. If part of the nucleotide sequence encodes a
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<=D\Ckmb )r)3.|wJm NCBI Handbook GenBank
02lI-xHe protein, a conceptual translation, called a CDS (coding sequence), is annotated. The span of the
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x eT. CDS feature is mapped to the nucleotide sequence encoding the protein. A protein Accession num-
l1&NU'WW ber (/protein_id) is assigned to the translation product, which will subsequently be added to the
FG^Jh5 protein databases.
.@3 Multiple sequences can be submitted together. Such batch submissions of non-related sequen-
P,|%7'? Y ces may be processed together but will be displayed in Entrez (Chapter 15) as single records.
Lad8C Alternatively, by using the Sequin submission tool (Chapter 12), a submitter can specify that several
vnNX)$f sequences are biologically related. Such sequences are classified as environmental sample sets,
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Jg;( population sets, phylogenetic sets, mutation sets, or segmented sets. Each sequence within a set
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