Announcing the worldwide Protein Data Bank

mentation will be kept publicly available and the distribution sites will mirror the PDB archive using identical contents and subdirectory structure. However, each member of the wwPDB will be able to develop its own web site, with a unique view of the primary data, providing a variety of tools and resources for the global community. An Advisory Board consisting of appointees from the wwPDB, the International Union of Crystallography and the International Council on Magnetic Resonance in Biological Systems will provide guidance through annual meetings with the wwPDB consortium. This board is responsible for reviewing and determining policy as well as providing a forum for resolving issues related to the wwPDB. Specific details about the Advisory Board can be found in the wwPDB charter, available on the wwPDB web site. The RCSB is the ‘archive keeper’ of wwPDB. It has sole write access to the PDB archive and control over directory structure and contents, as well as responsibility for distributing new PDB identifiers to all deposition sites. The PDB archive is a collection of flat files in the legacy PDB file format 3 and in the mmCIF 4 format that follows the PDB exchange dictionary (http://deposit.pdb.org/ mmcif/). This dictionary describes the syntax and semantics of PDB data that are processed and exchanged during the process of data annotation. It was designed to provide consistency in data produced in structure laboratories, processed by the wwPDB members and used in bioinformatics applications. The PDB archive does not include the websites, browsers, software and database query engines developed by researchers worldwide. The members of the wwPDB will jointly agree to any modifications or extensions to the PDB exchange dictionary. As data technology progresses, other data formats (such as XML) and delivery methods may be included in the official PDB archive if all the wwPDB members concur on the alteration. Any new formats will follow the naming and description conventions of the PDB exchange dictionary. In addition, the legacy PDB format would not be modified unless there is a compelling reason for a change. Should such a situation occur, all three wwPDB members would have to agree on the changes and give the structural biology community 90 days advance notice. The creation of the wwPDB formalizes the international character of the PDB and ensures that the archive remains single and uniform. It provides a mechanism to ensure consistent data for software developers and users worldwide. We hope that this will encourage individual creativity in developing tools for presenting structural data, which could benefit the scientific research community in general.