John D. Westbrook Jr. (1957-2021), Research Professor at Rutgers University and 
Data & Software Architect Lead for the RCSB PDB, passed away on October 18, 
2021.

He was incredibly beloved and respected by his colleagues at Rutgers and 
throughout the world, known for his dry wit and endless enthusiasm for thinking 
about all aspects of data and data management.

John had a long and highly successful career developing ontologies, tools, and 
infrastructure in data acquisition, validation, standardization, and mining in 
the structural biology and life science domains. His work established the 
PDBx/mmCIF data dictionary and format as the foundation of the modern Protein 
Data Bank (PDB) archive (wwPDB.org).

More than twenty-five years ago, while still a graduate student, John 
recognized the importance of a well-defined data model for ensuring delivery of 
high quality and reliable structural information to data users. He was the 
principal architect of the mmCIF data representation for biological 
macromolecular data. Based on a simple, context-free grammar (without column 
width constraints), data are presented in either key-value or tabular form. All 
relationships between common data items (e.g., atom and residue identifiers) 
are explicitly documented within the PDBx Exchange Dictionary 
(mmcif.wwpdb.org). Use of the PDBx/mmCIF format enables software applications 
to evaluate and validate referential integrity within any PDB entry. A key 
strength of the mmCIF technology is the extensibility afforded by its rich 
collection of software-accessible metadata.

The current PDBx/mmCIF dictionary contains more than 6,200 definitions relating 
to experiments involved in macromolecular structure determination and 
descriptions of the structures themselves. The first implementation of this 
schema was used for the Nucleic Acid Database, a data resource of nucleic 
acid-containing X-ray crystallographic structures. Today, this dictionary 
underpins all data management of the PDB. Since 2014, it has served as the 
Master Format for the PDB archive. It also forms the basis of the Chemical 
Component Dictionary (wwpdb.org/data/ccd), which is used to maintain and 
distribute small molecule chemical reference data in the PDB.

In 2011, the Worldwide Protein Data Bank (wwPDB) PDBx/mmCIF Working Group was 
established to enable direct use of PDBx/mmCIF format files within major 
macromolecular crystallography software tools and to provide recommendations on 
format extensions required for deposition of larger macromolecule structures to 
the PDB. This was a key step in the evolution of the PDB archive, which enabled 
studies of macromolecular machines, such as the ribosome, as single PDB 
structures (instead of split entries with atomic coordinates distributed among 
different entry files). In 2019, mandatory submission of PDBx/mmCIF format 
files for deposition was announced (Adams et al. Acta Crystallographica D75, 
451-454).

To ensure the success of the PDBx/mmCIF dictionary and format, John worked with 
a wide range of community experts to extend the framework to encompass 
descriptions of macromolecular X-ray crystallographic experiments, 3D 
cryo-electron microscopy experiments, NMR spectroscopy experiments, protein and 
nucleic acid structural features, diffraction image data, and protein 
production and crystallization protocols. Most recently, these efforts have 
been focused on developing compatible data representations for X-ray free 
electron (XFEL) methods, and for integrative or hybrid methods (I/HM). I/HM 
structures, currently stored in the prototype PDB-Dev archive 
(pdb-dev.wwpdb.org), presented new challenges for data exchange among rapidly 
evolving and heterogeneous experimental repositories. Proper management of I/HM 
structures in PDB-Dev also required extension of the PDBx/mmCIF data dictionary 
to include coarse-grained or multiscale models, which will be essential for 
studying macromolecular structures in situ using cryo-electron tomography and 
other bioimaging methods.

John contributed broadly to community data standards enabling interoperation 
and data integration within the biology and structural biology domains. His 
efforts have included (i) describing the increasing molecular complexity of 
macromolecular structure data, (ii) representing new experimental 
methodologies, including I/M techniques, and (iii) expanding the biological 
context required to facilitate broader integration with a spectrum of 
biomedical resources. John’s work has been central to connecting 
crystallographic and related structural data for biological macromolecules to 
key resources across scientific disciplines. His efforts have been described in 
more than 120 peer-reviewed publications, one of which has been cited more than 
21,000 times according to the Web of Science (Berman et al. Nucleic Acids 
Research 28, 235-242). Eight of his most influential published papers have 
appeared in the International Tables of Crystallography.

John has also done yeoman service to the crystallographic community over many 
years and was recognized with the inaugural Biocuration Career Award from the 
International Society for Biocuration in 2016.

For the International Union of Crystallography, John served on the Commission 
for Maintenance of CIF Standard (COMCIFS), the Working Group on Data 
Diffraction Deposition (DDDWG), and the Committee on Data (CommDat). He also 
served as an Associate Editor for Acta Crystallographica Section F.

John was a long-standing member of the American Crystallographic Association, 
and served on the Data, Standards & Computing Committee. He also served on the 
Metadata Interest Group for the Research Data Alliance.

John is survived by his wife, Bonnie J. Wagner-Westbrook, Ed.D. and his devoted 
Mother-in-Law, Joan N. Wagner of Clinton Twp., NJ; many cousins including 
Chandler Turner (of Portsmouth, VA), Ann (Turner) Heyes (of Tasmania, 
Australia) and Louise (Turner) Brown (of Oakland CA).

Visitation will take place on Saturday, November 6, 2021 from 2-4pm with 
Memorial Service at 4pm. All at Scarponi-Bright Funeral Home 
(https://www.scarponifuneralhomes.com/), 26 Main Street, Lebanon, NJ. Interment 
will be private.

Memorials can be made to Capicats (http://www.capiccats.com/) or an 
organization of choice in his honor.

Additional information is available at Scarponi-Bright: 
https://www.scarponifuneralhomes.com/notices/John-WestbrookJr
########################################################################

To unsubscribe from the CCP4BB list, click the following link:
https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/WA-JISC.exe?SUBED1=CCP4BB&A=1

This message was issued to members of www.jiscmail.ac.uk/CCP4BB, a mailing list 
hosted by www.jiscmail.ac.uk, terms & conditions are available at 
https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/policyandsecurity/

Reply via email to