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SciCrunch Registry is a curated repository of scientific resources, with a focus on biomedical resources, including tools, databases, and core facilities - visit SciCrunch to register your resource.

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On page 12 showing 221 ~ 240 out of 315 results
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  • RRID:SCR_006454

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

http://lincs.hms.harvard.edu/db/

Database that contains all publicly available HMS LINCS datasets and information for each dataset about experimental reagents and experimental and data analysis protocols. Experimental reagents include small molecule perturbagens, cells, antibodies, and proteins.

Proper citation: HMS LINCS Database (RRID:SCR_006454) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_006608

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

http://dgidb.genome.wustl.edu/

A database of drug-gene relationships that provides drug-gene interactions and potential druggability data given list of genes. There are about 15 data sources that are being aggregated by DGIdb, with update date and these data sources are listed on this page: http://dgidb.genome.wustl.edu/sources, THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.

Proper citation: DGIdb (RRID:SCR_006608) Copy   


https://www.phenxtoolkit.org/

Set of measures intended for use in large-scale genomic studies. Facilitate replication and validation across studies. Includes links to standards and resources in effort to facilitate data harmonization to legacy data. Measurement protocols that address wide range of research domains. Information about each protocol to ensure consistent data collection.Collections of protocols that add depth to Toolkit in specific areas.Tools to help investigators implement measurement protocols.

Proper citation: Phenotypes and eXposures Toolkit (RRID:SCR_006532) Copy   


http://www.informatics.jax.org/searches/AMA_form.shtml

Ontology that organizes anatomical structures for the adult mouse (Theiler stage 28) spatially and functionally, using ''is a'' and ''part of'' relationships. The ontology is used to describe expression data for the adult mouse and phenotype data pertinent to anatomy in standardized ways. The browser can be used to view anatomical terms and their relationships in a hierarchical display.

Proper citation: Adult Mouse Anatomy Ontology (RRID:SCR_006568) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_006873

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

http://bio.math.berkeley.edu/eXpress/index.html

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented January 29, 2018.
From website: "Note that the eXpress software is also no longer being developed. We recommend you use kallisto instead." Kallisto can be found at http://pachterlab.github.io/kallisto/.

Software for streaming quantification for high-throughput DNA/RNA sequencing.
Can be used in any application where abundances of target sequences need to be estimated from short reads sequenced from them.

Proper citation: eXpress (RRID:SCR_006873) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_006793

    This resource has 1000+ mentions.

http://genome.ucsc.edu/ENCODE

Encyclopedia of DNA elements consisting of list of functional elements in human genome, including elements that act at protein and RNA levels, and regulatory elements that control cells and circumstances in which gene is active. Enables scientific and medical communities to interpret role of human genome in biology and disease. Provides identification of common cell types to facilitate integrative analysis and new experimental technologies based on high-throughput sequencing. Genome Browser containing ENCODE and Epigenomics Roadmap data. Data are available for entire human genome.

Proper citation: ENCODE (RRID:SCR_006793) Copy   


http://www.1000genomes.org/

International collaboration producing an extensive public catalog of human genetic variation, including SNPs and structural variants, and their haplotype contexts, in an effort to provide a foundation for investigating the relationship between genotype and phenotype. The genomes of about 2500 unidentified people from about 25 populations around the world were sequenced using next-generation sequencing technologies. Redundant sequencing on various platforms and by different groups of scientists of the same samples can be compared. The results of the study are freely and publicly accessible to researchers worldwide. The consortium identified the following populations whose DNA will be sequenced: Yoruba in Ibadan, Nigeria; Japanese in Tokyo; Chinese in Beijing; Utah residents with ancestry from northern and western Europe; Luhya in Webuye, Kenya; Maasai in Kinyawa, Kenya; Toscani in Italy; Gujarati Indians in Houston; Chinese in metropolitan Denver; people of Mexican ancestry in Los Angeles; and people of African ancestry in the southwestern United States. The goal Project is to find most genetic variants that have frequencies of at least 1% in the populations studied. Sequencing is still too expensive to deeply sequence the many samples being studied for this project. However, any particular region of the genome generally contains a limited number of haplotypes. Data can be combined across many samples to allow efficient detection of most of the variants in a region. The Project currently plans to sequence each sample to about 4X coverage; at this depth sequencing cannot provide the complete genotype of each sample, but should allow the detection of most variants with frequencies as low as 1%. Combining the data from 2500 samples should allow highly accurate estimation (imputation) of the variants and genotypes for each sample that were not seen directly by the light sequencing. All samples from the 1000 genomes are available as lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) and LCL derived DNA from the Coriell Cell Repository as part of the NHGRI Catalog. The sequence and alignment data generated by the 1000genomes project is made available as quickly as possible via their mirrored ftp sites. ftp://ftp.1000genomes.ebi.ac.uk ftp://ftp-trace.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/1000genomes

Proper citation: 1000 Genomes: A Deep Catalog of Human Genetic Variation (RRID:SCR_006828) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_016368

    This resource has 1000+ mentions.

http://bowtie-bio.sourceforge.net/bowtie2/index.shtml

Ultrafast and memory efficient tool for aligning sequencing reads to long reference sequences. Supports gapped, local, and paired end alignment modes. More suited to finding longer, gapped alignments in comparison with original Bowtie method.

Proper citation: Bowtie 2 (RRID:SCR_016368) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_015723

    This resource has 1000+ mentions.

http://chopchop.cbu.uib.no/

Web application for designing gRNAs for CRISPR/Cas9 experiments. It selects target sites for CRISPR/Cas9, CRISPR/Cpf1 or TALEN-directed mutagenesis.

Proper citation: CHOPCHOP (RRID:SCR_015723) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_015969

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

http://code.google.com/p/amap-align/

Source code that performs multiple alignment of peptidic sequences. It utilizes posterior decoding and a sequence-annealing alignment, instead of the traditional progressive alignment method.

Proper citation: AMAP (RRID:SCR_015969) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_015879

    This resource has 50+ mentions.

https://www.github.com/arq5x/poretools

Software toolkit for analyzing nanopore sequence data.

Proper citation: Poretools (RRID:SCR_015879) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_005830

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://pubsearch.stanford.edu/

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVCE, documented September 2, 2016. PubSearch is a web-based literature curation tool, allowing curators to search and annotate genes to keywords from articles. It has a simple mySQL database backend and uses a set of Java Servlets and JSPs for querying, modifying, and adding gene, gene-annotation, and literature information. PubSearch can be downloaded from GMOD. Platform: Online tool, Windows compatible, Mac OS X compatible, Linux compatible, Unix compatible

Proper citation: PubSearch (RRID:SCR_005830) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_006165

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

http://phenomebrowser.net/

PhenomeNet is a cross-species phenotype similarity network. It contains the experimentally observed phenotypes of multiple species as well as the phenotypes of human diseases. PhenomeNet provides a measure of phenotypic similarity between the phenotypes it contains. The latest release (from 22 June 2012) contains 124,730 complex phenotype nodes taken from the yeast, fish, worm, fly, rat, slime mold and mouse model organism databases as well as human disease phenotypes from OMIM and OrphaNet. The network is a complete graph in which edge weights represent the degree of phenotypic similarity. Phenotypic similarity can be used to identify and prioritize candidate disease genes, find genes participating in the same pathway and orthologous genes between species. To compute phenotypic similarity between two sets of phenotypes, we use a weighted Jaccard index. First, phenotype ontologies are used to infer all the implications of a phenotype observation using several phenotype ontologies. As a second step, the information content of each phenotype is computed and used as a weight in the Jaccard index. Phenotypic similarity is useful in several ways. Phenotypic similarity between a phenotype resulting from a genetic mutation and a disease can be used to suggest candidate genes for a disease. Phenotypic similarity can also identify genes in a same pathway or orthologous genes. PhenomeNet uses the axioms in multiple species-dependent phenotype ontologies to infer equivalent and related phenotypes across species. For this purpose, phenotype ontologies and phenotype annotations are integrated in a single ontology, and automated reasoning is used to infer equivalences. Specifically, for every phenotype, PhenomeNet infers the related mammalian phenotype and uses the Mammalian Phenotype Ontology for computing phenotypic similarity. Tools: * PhenomeBLAST - A tool for cross-species alignments of phenotypes * PhenomeDrug - method for drug-repurposing

Proper citation: phenomeNET (RRID:SCR_006165) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_006206

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

http://modencode.org/

A comprehensive encyclopedia of genomic functional elements in the model organisms C. elegans and D. melanogaster. modENCODE is run as a Research Network and the consortium is formed by 11 primary projects, divided between worm and fly, spanning the domains of gene structure, mRNA and ncRNA expression profiling, transcription factor binding sites, histone modifications and replacement, chromatin structure, DNA replication initiation and timing, and copy number variation. The raw and interpreted data from this project is vetted by a data coordinating center (DCC) to ensure consistency and completeness. The entire modENCODE data corpus is now available on the Amazon Web Services EC2 cloud. What this means is that virtual machines and virtual compute clusters that you run within the EC2 cloud can mount the modENCODE data set in whole or in part. Your software can run analyses against the data files directly without experiencing the long waits and logistics associated with copying the datasets over to your local hardware. You may also view the data using GBrowse, Dataset Search, or download the data via FTP, as well as download pre-release datasets.

Proper citation: modENCODE (RRID:SCR_006206) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_006207

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

http://sparkinsight.org

A clustering and visualization tool that enables the interactive exploration of genome-wide data, with a specialization in epigenomics data. Spark is also available as a service within the Epigenome toolset of the Genboree Workbench. The approach utilizes data clusters as a high-level visual guide and supports interactive inspection of individual regions within each cluster. The cluster view links to gene ontology analysis tools and the detailed region view connects to existing genome browser displays taking advantage of their wealth of annotation and functionality.

Proper citation: Spark (RRID:SCR_006207) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_006281

    This resource has 5000+ mentions.

http://galaxyproject.org/

Open, web-based platform providing bioinformatics tools and services for data intensive genomic research. Platform may be used as a service or installed locally to perform, reproduce, and share complete analyses. Galaxy automatically tracks and manages data provenance and provides support for capturing the context and intent of computational methods. Galaxy Community has created Galaxy instances in many different forms and for many different applications including Galaxy servers, cloud services that support Galaxy instances, and virtual machines and containers that can be easily deployed for your own server.The Galaxy team is a part of BX at Penn State, and the Biology and Mathematics and Computer Science departments at Emory University.Training Infrastructure as a Service (TIaaS) is a service offered by some UseGalaxy servers to specifically support training use cases.

Proper citation: Galaxy (RRID:SCR_006281) Copy   


https://pachterlab.github.io/cgal/

Software tool for computing genome assembly likelihoods.Computes likelihood of reads with respect to assembly and statistical model which can be used as metric for evaluating assemblies. Novel likelihood based approach to assembly assessment in absence of ground truth.

Proper citation: Computing Genome Assembly Likelihoods (RRID:SCR_017624) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_017579

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

https://imputationserver.sph.umich.edu/

Web server to implement whole genotype imputation workflow for efficient parallelization of computationally intensive tasks. Service for imputation that facilitates access to new reference panels and greatly improves user experience and productivity. Used to find haplotype segments and reference panel of sequenced genomes, assign genotypes at untyped markers, improve genome coverage, facilitate comparison and combination of studies that use different marker panels, increase power to detect genetic association, and guide fine mapping.

Proper citation: Michigan Imputation Server (RRID:SCR_017579) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_018087

    This resource has 5000+ mentions.

https://web.expasy.org/protparam/

Software tool to calculate various physicochemical parameters for given protein stored in Swiss-Prot or TrEMBL or for user entered protein sequence. Protein can either be pecified as Swiss-Prot/TrEMBL accession number or ID, or in form of raw sequence. Computed parameters include molecular weight, theoretical pI, amino acid composition, atomic composition, extinction coefficient, estimated half-life, instability index, aliphatic index and grand average of hydropathicity.

Proper citation: ProtParam Tool (RRID:SCR_018087) Copy   


https://cadd.gs.washington.edu/

Web tool for predicting deleteriousness of variants throughout human genome. Software tool for scoring deleteriousness of single nucleotide variants as well as insertion and deletions variants in human genome.

Proper citation: Combined Annotation Dependent Depletion (RRID:SCR_018393) Copy   



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