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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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http://biocomputer.bio.cuhk.edu.hk/T3DB/

Database aimed to annotate all bacterial Type III Secretion System (T3SS) related structure, effector, regulator, and auxiliary genes.

Proper citation: Type-III-Secretion-System related database (RRID:SCR_002941) Copy   


http://integrativebiology.org/

Database for molecular interaction information integrated with various other bio-entity information, including pathways, diseases, gene ontology (GO) terms, species and molecular types. The information is obtained from several manually curated databases and automatic extraction from literature. There are protein-protein interaction, gene/protein regulation and protein-small molecule interaction information stored in the database. The interaction information is linked with relevant GO terms, pathway, disease and species names. Interactions are also linked to the PubMed IDs of the corresponding abstracts the interactions were obtained from. Manually curated molecular interaction information was obtained from BioGRID, IntAct, NCBI Gene, and STITCH database. Pathway related information was obtained from KEGG database, Pathway Interaction database and Reactome. Disease information was obtained from PharmGKB and KEGG database. Gene ontology terms and related information was obtained from Gene Ontology database and GOA database.

Proper citation: Integrated Molecular Interaction Database (RRID:SCR_003546) Copy   


http://www.ebi.ac.uk/goldman-srv/pandit

PANDIT is a collection of multiple sequence alignments and phylogenetic trees covering many common protein domains. It contains: * the seed protein sequence alignments from the Pfam-A (curated families) database (version 17.0) * nucleotide sequence alignments derived from sequences available for the above and using the protein alignments as "templates"; * protein sequence alignments restricted to the family members for which nucleotide sequences are available * inferred phylogenetic trees for each alignment The data in PANDIT and the dataset's development have been frozen owing to a lack of funding support. The existing data, version 17.0 corresponding to Pfam 17.0, remain stable and, we hope, useful. The entire database is also available for download as a flatfile from this website.

Proper citation: PANDIT : Protein and Associated Nucleotide Domains with Inferred Trees (RRID:SCR_003321) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_004218

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/structure

Database of three-dimensional structures of macromolecules that allows the user to retrieve structures for specific molecule types as well as structures for genes and proteins of interest. Three main databases comprise Structure-The Molecular Modeling Database; Conserved Domains and Protein Classification; and the BioSystems Database. Structure also links to the PubChem databases to connect biological activity data to the macromolecular structures. Users can locate structural templates for proteins and interactively view structures and sequence data to closely examine sequence-structure relationships. * Macromolecular structures: The three-dimensional structures of biomolecules provide a wealth of information on their biological function and evolutionary relationships. The Molecular Modeling Database (MMDB), as part of the Entrez system, facilitates access to structure data by connecting them with associated literature, protein and nucleic acid sequences, chemicals, biomolecular interactions, and more. It is possible, for example, to find 3D structures for homologs of a protein of interest by following the Related Structure link in an Entrez Protein sequence record. * Conserved domains and protein classification: Conserved domains are functional units within a protein that act as building blocks in molecular evolution and recombine in various arrangements to make proteins with different functions. The Conserved Domain Database (CDD) brings together several collections of multiple sequence alignments representing conserved domains, in addition to NCBI-curated domains that use 3D-structure information explicitly to define domain boundaries and provide insights into sequence/structure/function relationships. * Small molecules and their biological activity: The PubChem project provides information on the biological activities of small molecules and is a component of NIH''''s Molecular Libraries Roadmap Initiative. PubChem includes three databases: PCSubstance, PCBioAssay, and PCCompound. The PubChem data are linked to other data types (illustrated example) in the Entrez system, making it possible, for example, to retrieve information about a compound and then Link to its biological activity data, retrieve 3D protein structures bound to the compound and interactively view their active sites, and find biosystems that include the compound as a component. * Biological Systems: A biosystem, or biological system, is a group of molecules that interact directly or indirectly, where the grouping is relevant to the characterization of living matter. The NCBI BioSystems Database provides centralized access to biological pathways from several source databases and connects the biosystem records with associated literature, molecular, and chemical data throughout the Entrez system. BioSystem records list and categorize components (illustrated example), such as the genes, proteins, and small molecules involved in a biological system. The companion FLink icon FLink tool, in turn, allows you to input a list of proteins, genes, or small molecules and retrieve a ranked list of biosystems.

Proper citation: NCBI Structure (RRID:SCR_004218) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003569

    This resource has 50+ mentions.

http://signalink.org/

An integrated resource to analyze signaling pathway cross-talks, transcription factors, miRNAs and regulatory enzymes. The multi-layered database structure is made up of signaling pathways, their pathway regulators (e.g., scaffold and endocytotic proteins) and modifier enzymes (e.g., phosphatases, ubiquitin ligases), as well as transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulators of all of these components. The website allows the interactive exploration of how each signaling protein is regulated. Features * experimental data not only from humans but from two invertebrate model organisms, C. elegans and D. melanogaster; * combines manual curation with large-scale datasets; * provides confidence scores for each interaction; * operates a customizable download page with multiple file formats (e.g., BioPAX, Cytoscape, SBML).

Proper citation: SignaLink (RRID:SCR_003569) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003568

http://abc.med.cornell.edu/pdzbase

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 23,2022.A manually curated protein-protein interaction database developed specifically for interactions involving PDZ domains. It currently contains 339 experimentally determined protein protein interactions.

Proper citation: PDZBase (RRID:SCR_003568) Copy   


https://www.marshallscientific.com/Thermo-Scientific-NanoDrop-Lite-Spectrophotometer-p/nd-lite.htm?gad_source=1&gclid=CjwKCAjwr7ayBhAPEiwA6EIGxC4AdYs99Rc3OfymRdYRe515Nl20zJTLlockTfGGn5tWg6qvZRoQNRoCrwcQAvD_BwE

Compact, personal UV-Vis microvolume spectrophotometer that complements the full-featured NanoDrop 2000/2000c and NanoDrop 8000 instruments.

Proper citation: Thermo Scientific NanoDrop Lite Spectrophotometer (RRID:SCR_025369) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_008226

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://pdbfun.uniroma2.it/

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented August 23, 2016. PDBfun is a web server for structural and functional analysis of proteins at the residue level. pdbFun gives fast access to the whole Protein Data Bank (PDB) organized as a database of annotated residues. The available data (features) range from solvent exposure to ligand binding ability, location in a protein cavity, secondary structure, residue type, sequence functional pattern, protein domain and catalytic activity. PDBfun is an integrated web tool for querying the PDB at the residue level and for local structural comparison. It integrates knowledge on single residues in protein structures coming from other databases or calculated with available or in-house developed instruments for structural analysis. Each set of different annotations represents a feature. Features are listed in PDBfun main page in orange. Features can be used for building residues selections.

Proper citation: Protein Databank Fun (RRID:SCR_008226) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002702

https://simtk.org/home/allopathfinder

Software application and code base that allows users to compute likely allosteric pathways in proteins. The underlying assumption is that residues participating in allosteric communication should be fairly conserved and that communication happens through residues that are close in space. The initial application for the code provided was to study the allosteric communication in myosin. Myosin is a well-studied molecular motor protein that walks along actin filaments to achieve cellular tasks such as movement of cargo proteins. It couples ATP hydrolysis to highly-coordinated conformational changes that result in a power-stroke motion, or "walking" of myosin. Communication between a set of residues must link the three functional regions of myosin and transduce energy: the catalytic ATP binding region, the lever arm, and the actin-binding domain. They are investigating which residues are likely to participate in allosteric communication pathways. The application is a collection of C++/QT code, suitable for reproducing the computational results of the paper. (PMID 17900617) In addition, they provide input and alignment information to reproduce Figure 3 (a key figure) in the paper. Examples provided will show users how to use AlloPathFinder with other protein families, assumed to exhibit an allosteric communication. To run the application a multiple sequence alignment of representative proteins from the protein family is required along with at least one protein structure.

Proper citation: Allopathfinder (RRID:SCR_002702) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_014936

    This resource has 50+ mentions.

http://www.cbs.dtu.dk/services/ProP/

Web application which predicts arginine and lysine propeptide cleavage sites in eukaryotic protein sequences using an ensemble of neural networks. Furin-specific prediction is the default. It is also possible to perform a general proprotein convertase prediction.

Proper citation: ProP Server (RRID:SCR_014936) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003543

    This resource has 1000+ mentions.

http://mapman.gabipd.org/web/guest/mapman

Software tool that displays large genomics datasets (e.g. gene expression data from Arabidopsis Affymetrix arrays) onto diagrams of metabolic pathways or other biological processes.

Proper citation: MapMan (RRID:SCR_003543) Copy   


http://www.i3crb.fr/

Project to improve data and sample exchanges and to facilitate large scale analysis of data by improving interoperability of French Biological Resources Centres (BRC or biobanks) IT systems and biological databases. The work done in this project will be linked to other national (IBiSA, ANR, R��seau des Biobanques, Club 3C-R), European (BBMRI, ELIXIR) or international project (P3G). In the preliminary phase (2009-2010) I3-CRB has developed a directory of French Biological Resource Centres / Biobanks where one may register their French BRC or perform a search across all of them. Detail by overall data or kingdom is provided as well as many filtering options. Access to biological samples is provided by the participating BRC''''s. Biological Resources Centres (BRC or biobanks) collect annotated biological samples from various sources (human, animal, plant, bacteria...). The type of samples depends on the collection and the associated thematic (DNA, proteins, cells, tissues, blood, serum, organisms...). The aims of these centers are to collect, to store, to transform and to distribute the biological samples. They constitute a vital infrastructure for life science and health research. Goals of the French Biobanks/Biological Resource Centres: * List French biobanks and their biological collections * Improve sample exchanges * Improve the international visibility of the French biological collections MeSH terms have been integrated: Domains, diseases, and location of the disease (Anatomy). Collections/species are based on NCBI Taxonomy.

Proper citation: I3-CRB: Interoperable IT Infrastructure for Biological Resources Centres / Biobanks - France (RRID:SCR_006991) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_006142

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

https://sites.google.com/a/blueprint.org/trades/

With Trajectory Directed Ensemble Sampling (TraDES) create large ensembles of high-quality protein structures quickly, ranging from near-native to partially unfolded to intrinsically unfolded. TraDES is a system for directly controlling and sampling protein conformational space. TraDES has been previously used for measuring the vastness of protein conformational space and testing the hypothesis of a brute force solution to the protein folding problem. Over 10 Billion protein structures have been produced by TraDES software in previous distributed computing experiments. The package is comprised of binary executable programs and accessory programs and scripts as well as protein structure data files that map out protein conformational space in a probabilistic way. The main programs are: * trades - generates protein structures following the Trajectory Distribution (see below) * seq2trj - makes Trajectory Distributions from sequences for sampling * str2tr - makes Trajectory Distributions from 3D structures for sampling Trajectory Distributions - Controlling the Sampling of Conformational Space The concept of the trajectory distribution may be new to many protein scientists. A trajectory distribution is simply a map of available conformational space at an amino acid residue. NMR scientists are the primary users of the TraDES package.

Proper citation: TraDES (RRID:SCR_006142) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_000517

http://www.ucl.ac.uk/biobank/

Two University College London (UCL) biobanks, one based at the Royal Free Hospital (RFH) Campus and the other based at Bloomsbury supporting Pathology and the Cancer Institute, will act as physical repositories for collections of biological samples and data from patients consented at UCLH, Partners Hospitals and external sources. This will incorporate collections of existing stored samples and new collections. UCL-RFH BioBank, the physical repository at the Royal Free, presents a unique opportunity to advance medical research through making access to research tissue easier, faster and much more efficient. The BioBank is both a physical repository, with capacity for up to 1 million cryogenically stored samples and a virtual repository for all tissue, cell, plasma, serum, DNA and RNA samples stored throughout UCLP. In particular, samples considered "relevant material", such as tissues and cells, that are licensed by the Human Tissue Authority, can be stored long term. Existing holdings of tissues and cells where appropriate can be transferred to the Physical BioBank at the Royal Free. UCL - Royal Free BioBank provides a flexible approach to banking, allowing the Depositor to pick and choose services that are tailored to fit their requirements. Collaborations arising from publicizing of the existence of the holdings are entirely at the discretion of the depositor, as the facility ensures that access to the deposits remains at the decision of the Depositor/User. UCL Biobank for studying Health and Disease (based at Pathology-Rockefeller building and the UCL-Cancer Institute will support projects principally involved in the study of human disease. The aim is to support primarily, research in the Pathology Department, UCLH and the UCL-Cancer Institute but it will also support other UCLH partners. The biobank will store normal and pathological specimens, surplus to diagnostic requirements, from relevant tissues and bodily fluids. Stored tissues will include; snap-frozen or cryopreserved tissue, formalin-fixed tissue, paraffin-embedded tissues, and slides prepared for histological examination. Tissues will include resection specimens obtained surgically or by needle core biopsy. Bodily fluids will include; whole blood, serum, plasma, urine, cerebrospinal fluid, milk, saliva and buccal smears and cytological specimens such as sputum and cervical smears. Fine needle aspirates obtained from tissues and bodily cavities (e.g. pleura and peritoneum) will also be collected. Where appropriate the biobank will also store separated cells, protein, DNA and RNA isolated from collected tissues and bodily fluids described above. Some of the tissue and aspirated samples will be stored in the diagnostic archive.

Proper citation: UCL Biobank (RRID:SCR_000517) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_000820

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

http://www.biosyn.com/

A commercial supplier of custom synthetic molecules. They specialize in peptides, oligonucleotides, bioconjugation, molecular biology services, proteins and specialty chemistry.

Proper citation: Bio-Synthesis (RRID:SCR_000820) Copy   


http://www.pharmabase.org/

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented August 25, 2015. Open content cheminformatics database linking physiology with pharmacology, it targets the action and use of pharmacological compounds in modifying protein function, while revealing molecular relationships and linking out to related databases and sites. Pharmabase has been developed as a research tool, a resource for students, and an ongoing interactive forum on the use of pharmacological compounds in cellular research. It has several navigational routes, including a graphics browser (shows graphics of cell types and pathways) and membrane transport, which also illustrates the diversity of mechanisms that are covered. Users have access to detailed compound records with interactive features, and a form to send comments to the editor. Investigators are encouraged to alert the editors to mistakes, omissions or new compound information available from their reading and research.

Proper citation: Pharmabase - an open content cheminformatics resource linking physiology with pharmacology (RRID:SCR_002462) Copy   


http://dbserv2.informatik.uni-leipzig.de:8080/onex/

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 6,2023. Web-based application that integrates versions of 16 life science ontologies including the Gene Ontology, NCI Thesaurus and selected OBO ontologies with data leading back to 2002 in a common repository to explore ontology changes. It allows to study and apply the evolution of these integrated ontologies on three different levels. It provides global ontology evolution statistics and ontology-specific evolution trends for concepts and relationships and it allows the migration of annotations in case a new ontology version was released

Proper citation: OnEx - Ontology Evolution Explorer (RRID:SCR_000602) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_014594

    This resource has 500+ mentions.

http://tools.thermofisher.com/content/sfs/manuals/Man-XCALI-97194-BioWorks-331-SP1-User-ManXCALI97194-B-EN.pdf

A a configurable software package for peptide and protein mass spectrometry analyses. It includes the SEQUEST search algorithm to identify separate proteins in complex mixtures, interactive navigation tools to filter and sort protein summaries, customized spectral plots, and chromatograms using the PEPMATCH and PEPMAP tools. This software also has batch processing capabilities to improve throughput by queuing up several files, and custom-build proprietary databases, index databases, and retrieve databases through a public server.

Proper citation: BioWorks (RRID:SCR_014594) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_014631

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

http://fatcat.burnham.org/

Web server for flexible protein structure comparison. Structure alignment is formulated as the aligned fragment pairs chaining process allowing at most t twists, and the flexible structure alignment is transformed into a rigid structure alignment when t is forced to be 0., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.

Proper citation: FATCAT (RRID:SCR_014631) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_014914

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

http://www.bioclipse.net/

Open source downloadable application which contains a framework for managing and analyzing chemical compounds, as well as supports editing in 2D, processing large collections of molecules in tables, calculate various types of properties, and more cheminformatics functionality. This software also is used for the management and analysis of biological sequences (DNA, RNA, and protein), and relates the chemical structures and a target and then describes them using mathematical descriptors and models them using statistical methods. Bioclipse is equipped with a scripting language (Bioclipse Scripting Language or BSL) which can be used to automate tasks or create reusable snippets that can be shared with others,

Proper citation: Bioclipse (RRID:SCR_014914) Copy   



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