Database Commons
Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

General information

URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/assembly/
Full name:
Description: The NCBI Assembly database provides stable accessioning and data tracking for genome assembly data.
Year founded: 2016
Last update: 2015-08-30
Version:
Accessibility:
Manual:
Accessible
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Country/Region: United States

Classification & Tag

Data type:
DNA
Data object:
Database category:
Major species:
Keywords:

Contact information

University/Institution: National Center for Biotechnology Information
Address: Bethesda, MD 20894, USA
City: Bethesda
Province/State: MD
Country/Region: United States
Contact name (PI/Team): Paul A. Kitts
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): kitts@ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

Publications

26578580
Assembly: a resource for assembled genomes at NCBI. [PMID: 26578580]
Kitts PA, Church DM, Thibaud-Nissen F, Choi J, Hem V, Sapojnikov V, Smith RG, Tatusova T, Xiang C, Zherikov A, DiCuccio M, Murphy TD, Pruitt KD, Kimchi A.

The NCBI Assembly database (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/assembly/) provides stable accessioning and data tracking for genome assembly data. The model underlying the database can accommodate a range of assembly structures, including sets of unordered contig or scaffold sequences, bacterial genomes consisting of a single complete chromosome, or complex structures such as a human genome with modeled allelic variation. The database provides an assembly accession and version to unambiguously identify the set of sequences that make up a particular version of an assembly, and tracks changes to updated genome assemblies. The Assembly database reports metadata such as assembly names, simple statistical reports of the assembly (number of contigs and scaffolds, contiguity metrics such as contig N50, total sequence length and total gap length) as well as the assembly update history. The Assembly database also tracks the relationship between an assembly submitted to the International Nucleotide Sequence Database Consortium (INSDC) and the assembly represented in the NCBI RefSeq project. Users can find assemblies of interest by querying the Assembly Resource directly or by browsing available assemblies for a particular organism. Links in the Assembly Resource allow users to easily download sequence and annotations for current versions of genome assemblies from the NCBI genomes FTP site. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research 2015. This work is written by (a) US Government employee(s) and is in the public domain in the US.

Nucleic Acids Res. 2016:44(D1) | 177 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2024-04-20)

Ranking

All databases:
501/6000 (91.667%)
Raw bio-data:
42/539 (92.393%)
Gene genome and annotation:
180/1675 (89.313%)
Metadata:
48/619 (92.407%)
501
Total Rank
170
Citations
21.25
z-index

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Record metadata

Created on: 2016-01-06
Curated by:
Dong Zou [2018-03-09]
Lina Ma [2016-04-11]
Mengwei Li [2016-03-31]
Mengwei Li [2016-03-28]
Lin Liu [2016-02-08]
Lin Liu [2016-01-27]
Lin Liu [2016-01-12]
Lin Liu [2016-01-06]