Biology:ZINC database
This article needs additional citations for verification. (April 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) |
Content | |
---|---|
Description | Chemical database |
Data types captured | Commercially available and annotated small molecules for virtual screening |
Contact | |
Research centre | University of California San Francisco |
Laboratory | Irwin Lab Shoichet Lab |
Author(s) | John Irwin, Brian Shoichet, and a cast of several |
Primary citation | PMID 26479676 |
Release date | 2004 |
Access | |
Website | ZINC |
Miscellaneous | |
Software license | ZINC is free to use for everyone. Redistribution of significant subsets requires written permission from the authors. |
Software versioning | ZINC15 |
Data release frequency | continuously updated; static subsets regenerated quarterly or better. |
Curation policy | continuously curated |
The ZINC database (recursive acronym: ZINC is not commercial) is a curated collection of commercially available chemical compounds prepared especially for virtual screening. ZINC is used by investigators (generally people with training as biologists or chemists) in pharmaceutical companies, biotechnology companies, and research universities.
Scope and access
ZINC is different from other chemical databases because it aims to represent the biologically relevant, three dimensional form of the molecule.
Curation and updates
ZINC is updated regularly and may be downloaded and used free of charge. It is developed by John Irwin in the Shoichet Laboratory in the Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry at the University of California, San Francisco.
Version
The latest release of the website interface is "ZINC 15" (2015). The previous website was at ZINC, but the maintainers recommend moving to ZINC15 because of its better search capabilities. The database contents are continuously updated.
See also
- PubChem a database of small molecules from the chemical and biological literature, hosted by NCBI
- ChEMBL, a database of information about medicinal chemistry and biological activities of small molecules.
External links
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZINC database.
Read more |