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Frank Allen answers a
few questions about this month's fast breaking paper in the field of
Chemistry.
From
•>>June 2003
Field:
Chemistry
Article Title: "The Cambridge Structural Database: a quarter of a million crystal structures and rising"
Authors: Allen, FH
Journal: ACTA CRYSTALLOGR B-STRUCT SCI
Volume: 58
Page:
Year: JUN 2002
* Cambridge Crystallog Data Ctr, 12 Union Rd, Cambridge CB2 1EZ, England.
* Cambridge Crystallog Data Ctr, Cambridge CB2 1EZ, England.
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Why
do you think your paper is highly cited?
The Cambridge Structural Database (CSD) is the world’s
repository of crystallographic results for organic and
metal-organic compounds. The database now stores bibliographic,
chemical and numerical data for over 290,000 crystal structures,
and it increases by 24,000 new structures each year. The
database is heavily used as a research tool in structural
chemistry and in life sciences
applications, particularly those related to drug discovery.
Scientists who make use of the CSD wish to cite the most recent
reference to the database, and this is the first major update
paper to appear for more than a decade. The paper appears in a
journal which is readily accessible, well regarded, and highly
appropriate for the subject matter.
Does
it describe a new discovery or a new methodology that's useful to
others?
The paper provides a major update on the CSD itself,
including references to database access software supplied as
part of the CSD System and major reviews of CSD research
applications, which all appeared in a special issue of Acta
Crystallographica (Sections B and D, June 2002). Rather than
describing a new discovery or methodology (the CSD has been
distributed internationally since the late 1970s), it provides a
comprehensive overview of the CSD of today, together with
statistics that chart the development of small-molecule
crystallography. The related papers, however, do describe new
software methodologies, and provide detailed surveys of the
types of CSD-based studies that are contained in more than 1,000
research applications published internationally. The whole
purpose of CSD System development, and the development of CSD-related
software products in structural chemistry and the life sciences,
is to make crystal structure data more useful to others.
Could
you summarize the significance of your paper in layman's terms?
Crystal structure analysis is now the method of choice for
structural characterisation of both known and novel small
molecules. Apart from determining atomic connectivity, the
technique also provides accurate geometrical data concerning the
molecule itself and the interactions it makes with other
molecules in the extended crystal structure. Such data underpin
systematic studies of substructural features, such as mean
molecular dimensions, preferred conformations, structure-energy
relationships, etc. Knowledge of the geometries and
directionalities of hydrogen bonds and other non-bonded contacts
is vital in crystal structure prediction, crystal engineering,
and in predicting the docking modes of novel ligands with
protein active sites. The CSD is a complete and accurate source
of atomic coordinate data which are linked directly to the
underlying chemistry to permit substructure searching in both
two and three dimensions. The CSD and its associated software
allow the user to explore, visualize, and analyze molecular
structure and molecular interactions at a highly detailed level.
How
did you become involved in this research?
Following a Ph.D. and postdoctoral research in
crystallography, I was looking for a position that coupled
crystal structure analysis with the systematic analysis of its
results in structural chemistry. In 1970, I joined a group in
Cambridge University that had just started (since 1965) to
create a database of the known crystal structures of small
molecules. The CSD was one of the first numerical scientific
databases to be created anywhere, and presented significant
challenges of organization using the computer resources then
available. As the number of published crystal structures began
to rise, I became more and more involved in developing software
for database creation and access, helping to process the
increasing floods of numbers, and in using the accumulated data
in structural chemistry research.
The
Cambridge Structural Database: a quarter of a million structures
and rising Acta Crystallographica [Section B, Structural
Science], B58, 380-388, 2002.
Frank H. Allen, Ph.D.
Executive Director
Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre
Cambridge, United Kingdom
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ESI Special Topics,
June 2003
Citing URL - http://www.esi-topics.com/fbp/2003/june03-FrankAllen.html
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