Is that allowing for the fact that each deposition contains approximately 30 
models? If it doesn't take account of that, that could be 300,000 "structures"; 
if it does, it could be 300...



On 19 Jun 2013, at 17:07, David Briggs wrote:

> Yeah, but they're mostly wrong though.
> 
> *runs away and hides*
> 
> On Jun 19, 2013 5:02 PM, "Gary Battle" <[email protected]> wrote:
> The Worldwide Protein Data Bank (wwPDB; http://wwpdb.org) is excited to 
> announce that the number of structures available in the PDB archive 
> determined using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy has passed the 
> 10,000 mark!
> 
> Since the first biomacromolecular NMR structure was archived in 1989, the 
> number of NMR-derived structures in the PDB has grown steadily. Last year 
> alone over 500 new NMR structures were deposited, more than in the first 10 
> years of NMR depositions combined. Today, NMR-derived structures account for 
> more than 10% of the PDB archive which itself will reach the 100,000 
> structure mark in 2014.
> 
> You can read more about this milestone achievement and the dedicated 
> databases, tools and services that help make this wealth of structural 
> information accessible to the scientific community at http://wwpdb.org
> 
> on behalf of the wwPDB
> 
> -- 
> Gary Battle
> Protein Data Bank in Europe (PDBe)

Prof Peter Artymiuk
Krebs Institute
Department of Molecular Biology & Biotechnology
University of Sheffield
Sheffield
S10 2TN
ENGLAND



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