- Course overview
- Search within this course
- What is PDBe?
- Why do we need PDBe?
- When to use PDBe?
- How to access and navigate PDBe?
- How to search the PDB using PDBe?
- Guided exercise 1: Giardia lamlia
- Exercise 1: How do I search PDB for Giardia lamblia?
- Exercise 1: How many proteins are there in the PDB for Giardia lamblia?
- Exercise 1: How many of these proteins function as enzymes?
- Exercise 1: Which part of the cell do these proteins come from?
- Exercise 1: What type of ligands do they interact with?
- Guided exercise 2: Glycolysis process
- Exercise 2: How do I search the PDB for enzymes involved in glycolysis?
- Exercise 2: Are all the 10 enzyme structures that are involved in the glycolytic pathway present in the PDB?
- Exercise 2: What part of the cell do the enzymes belong to?
- Exercise 2: How do I identify the different classes of enzymes (e.g. hydrolase) that participate in glycolysis?
- Exercise 2: How many of them display nucleotide binding activity?
- Exercise 2: Which protein family/families does the enzyme Glucokinase belong to?
- Exercise 2: How do I identify the best representative structure from each of the protein families?
- Exploring a PDB entry
- Summary
- Test your knowledge
- Your feedback
- Learn more
- Get help and support on PDBe
- References
Summary
- PDBe is a founding member of wwPDB which archives PDB data
- You can search the PDB archive using the default search box at the top of the PDBe homepage
- The search box is equipped with an autocomplete feature, which displays suggested terms categorised by context
- Results are organised in a context dependent manner to help users explore the results from different perspectives
- The search can be saved on the web browser without any need to create a user account
- For searches which return multiple hits, the results are sorted based on quality – the best representative structure appears as the top hit
- You can use the ‘Batch download’ option on the search results page to download multiple hits at the same time