The European Bioinformatics Institute (EBI) is a centre for research and services in bioinformatics, and is part of European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL). It is a pioneer of novel and developmental bioinformatics research. It has specialist research and services groups providing a valuable biological data and utilities to aid the scientific community in the understanding of genomic and proteomic data. The EBI is located on the Wellcome Trust Genome Campus, by the small village of Hinxton, outside Cambridge, England.
The roots of the EMBL-EBI lie in the EMBL Nucleotide Sequence Data Library (now known as EMBL-Bank), which was established in 1980 at the EMBL laboratories in Heidelberg, Germany and was the world's first nucleotide sequence database. The original goal was to establish a central computer database of DNA sequences, rather than have scientists submit sequences to journals. What began as a modest task of abstracting information from literature soon became a major database activity with direct electronic submissions of data and the need for highly skilled informatics staff. The task grew in scale with the start of the genome projects, and grew in visibility as the data became relevant to research in the commercial sector. It soon became apparent that the EMBL Nucleotide Sequence Data Library needed better financial security to ensure its long-term viability and to cope with the sheer scale of the task.
There was also a need for research and development to provide services, to collaborate with global partners to support the project, and to provide assistance to industry. To this end, in 1992, the EMBL Council voted to establish the European Bioinformatics Institute and to locate it at the Wellcome Trust Genome Campus in the United Kingdom where it would be in close proximity to the major sequencing efforts at the Sanger Institute. From 1992 through to 1995, a gradual transition of the activities in Heidelberg took place, until in September 1995 the EMBL-EBI occupied its current location on the Wellcome Trust Genome Campus.
When the EMBL-EBI moved to Hinxton it hosted two databases, one for nucleotide sequences (the EMBL Data Library, now known as EMBL-Bank) and one for protein sequences (Swiss-Prot–TrEMBL, now known as UniProt). Since then, the EMBL-EBI has helped to lead the bioinformatics revolution: we have diversified to provide data resources in all the major molecular domains, expanded to include a broad research base, developed unique ways of supporting our users, and we offer advanced training in bioinformatics.
Funding
As part of EMBL, the largest part of our funding comes from the governments of EMBL's 20 member states. Other major funders include the European Commission, Wellcome Trust, US National Institutes of Health, UK Research Councils, our industry partners and the UK Department of Trade and Industry. In addition, the Wellcome Trust generously provides the facilities for the EMBL-EBI on its Genome Campus at Hinxton, and the UK Research Councils have also provided funds for our facilities in Hinxton. We thank all our funders for allowing us to continue and expand our work.
Provides, for almost 35 species, a genome browser, public access to the MySQL databases of annotations shown in the browser, and a PerlAPI for accessing the database. The group is divided fairly equally between the EBI and the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute with gene builders and web team on the Sanger side, and core database and comparative genomics teams at the EBI.
Uses microarray technology to analyse the sequence data from the genome projects to identify which genes are expressed in a particular cell type of an organism.
Coordinates firstly communicating the scientific mission and activities of the EBI to the community and secondly the scientific training programme of the EBI. The EBI’s user-training programme equips users of the EBI’s bioinformatics services with the knowledge that they need to use our data resources.
The EBI supports Industry through two programmes: the EBI Industry Programme is a well established, subscription-based programme for large companies whereas the SME Support Forum offers support to smaller companies that are not eligible to join the Industry Programme.
This part of the Panda Nucleotides Group (The Vertebrate Genomics Group) focuses on functional annotation of the genome including methods for incorporating high-throughput epigenetic data for expanding and understanding the collection of human variation.
The GO Editorial Office at EBI coordinates the development and maintenance of the GO vocabularies, and contributes to several other GO project efforts, including documentation, web presence, software testing, and user support.
Focuses on gene transcription and protein-DNA binding analysis with DNA microarrays; statistical computing and high-throughput cellular assays and genetic interaction screens.
Develops and maintains the InterPro project, an integrated documentation resource for protein families, domains and functional sites that is used for small and large-scale functional classification of proteins.
Systems Group (Petteri Jokinen)
Maintains and develops state-of-art computing infrastructure on which most EBI operations are run.
The interests of the group Computational Neurobiology revolve around signal transduction in neurons, ranging from the molecular structure of membrane proteins involved in neurotransmission to modelling signalling pathways. A strong focus is the molecular and cellular basis of synaptic plasticity in neurons of the basal ganglia. The group also provide tools and resources for computational systems biology, including the SBO, the Systems Biology Ontology, MIRIAM Resources, plus software to develop models. A main project of the group is the BioModels Database, which allows biologists to store, search and retrieve published mathematical models of biological interest.
Focuses on extraction of facts from scientific literature in molecular biology. The main methods are based on Finite State Automatons (FSAs). In the past has worked on the identification of protein-protein interactions, acronyms and descriptions of mutations.
This group is investigating & advising on the e-Science & Grid technology requirements of the EMBL-EBI, through application development plus participation in standards development.
The Steinbeck group's research in molecular informatics focuses on the understanding of the small-molecule metabolism of living organism, including methods for computer-assisted structure elucidation of biological metabolites and simulations of metabolic pathways.
Using biomolecular structures, tries to understand enzyme active sites, protein-protein interactions, protein-ligand interactions, protein-DNA interactions and structure and modelling.
The Database Research and Development Group Conduct research and development on the database-related challenges. Biomolecular databases are becoming increasingly large, complex and interconnected. This increase of data scale, complexity and the need of interoperability means that there are many fundamental challenges in the database development, deployment and distribution. The group will be leading the EBI's research into database technologies, looking both at solutions from other fields with similar datasets and examining new, cutting edge technologies from database research.
Provides short and concise introductions to basic concepts in molecular and cell biology and bioinformatics. It focuses on making it as easy for the user to understand which tools and databases are available from the EBI and collaborating sites. It also provides links to other sites where similar resources are maintained and well supported.