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The Protein Information Resource (PIR), located at
Georgetown University Medical Center (GUMC), is an integrated public bioinformatics
resource to support genomic and proteomic research, and scientific studies (Wu et al., 2003).
PIR was established in 1984 by the National Biomedical Research Foundation
(NBRF)
as a resource to assist researchers in the identification and interpretation
of protein sequence information. Prior to that, the NBRF compiled the first
comprehensive collection of macromolecular sequences in the Atlas of Protein
Sequence and Structure, published from 1965-1978 under the editorship of
Margaret O. Dayhoff. Dr. Dayhoff and her research group pioneered in the development
of computer methods for the comparison of protein sequences, for the detection
of distantly related sequences and duplications within sequences, and for the
inference of evolutionary histories from alignments of protein sequences.
Dr. Winona
Barker and Dr.
Robert Ledley assumed leadership of the project after the untimely death
of Dr. Dayhoff in 1983.
In 1999, Dr. Cathy H. Wu joined NBRF,
and later on GUMC, to head the bioinformatics efforts of PIR, and has served first as Principal Investigator and, since 2001, as Director.
For four decades, PIR has provided many protein databases and analysis tools freely accessible to the scientific community, including the Protein Sequence Database (PSD),
the first international database (see PIR-International), which grew out of Atlas of Protein
Sequence and Structure.
In 2002, PIR along with its international partners,
EBI (European Bioinformatics
Institute) and
SIB (Swiss Institute of
Bioinformatics), were awarded a grant from
NIH to
create UniProt, a single worldwide database of protein sequence and function,
by unifying the PIR-PSD, Swiss-Prot, and
TrEMBL databases.
Today, PIR offers a wide variety of resources mainly oriented to assist the propagation and standarization of protein annotation:
For more information regarding PIR view our
publication history.
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