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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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https://www.fludb.org/brc/home.spg?decorator=influenza

The Influenza Research Database (IRD) serves as a public repository and analysis platform for flu sequence, experiment, surveillance and related data.

Proper citation: Influenza Research Database (IRD) (RRID:SCR_006641) Copy   


http://www.autoimmunitycenters.org/

Nine centers that conduct clinical trials and basic research on new immune-based therapies for autoimmune diseases. This program enhances interactions between scientists and clinicians in order to accelerate the translation of research findings into medical applications. By promoting better coordination and communication, and enabling limited resources to be pooled, ACEs is one of NIAID''''s primary vehicles for both expanding our knowledge and improving our ability to effectively prevent and treat autoimmune diseases. This coordinated approach incorporates key recommendations of the NIH Autoimmune Diseases Research Plan and will ensure progress in identifying new and highly effective therapies for autoimmune diseases. ACEs is advancing the search for effective treatments through: * Diverse Autoimmunity Expertise Medical researchers at ACEs include rheumatologists, neurologists, gastroenterologists, and endocrinologists who are among the elite in their respective fields. * Strong Mechanistic Foundation ACEs augment each clinical trial with extensive basic studies designed to enhance understanding of the mechanisms responsible for tolerance initiation, maintenance, or loss, including the role of cytokines, regulatory T cells, and accessory cells, to name a few. * Streamlined Patient Recruitment The cooperative nature of ACEs helps scientists recruit patients from distinct geographical areas. The rigorous clinical and basic science approach of ACEs helps maintain a high level of treatment and analysis, enabling informative comparisons between patient groups.

Proper citation: Autoimmunity Centers of Excellence (RRID:SCR_006510) Copy   


http://www.niaid.nih.gov/topics/transplant/research/Pages/fundedBasics.aspx#NHPTCSP

Cooperative program for research on nonhuman primate models of kidney, islet, heart, and lung transplantation evaluating the safety and efficacy of existing and new treatment regimens that promote the immune system''''s acceptance of a transplant and to understand why the immune system either rejects or does not reject a transplant. This program bridges the critical gap between small-animal research and human clinical trials. The program supports research into the immunological mechanisms of tolerance induction and development of surrogate markers for the induction, maintenance, and loss of tolerance.

Proper citation: Nonhuman Primate Transplantation Tolerance Cooperative Study Group (RRID:SCR_006847) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_007086

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://hcv.lanl.gov/content/immuno/immuno-main.html

The HCV Immunology Database contains a curated inventory of immunological epitopes in HCV and their interaction with the immune system, with associated retrieval and analysis tools. The funding for the HCV database project has stopped, and this website and the HCV immunology database are no longer maintained. The site will stay up, but problems will not be fixed. The database was last updated in September 2007. The HIV immunology website contains the same tools, and may be usable for non-HCV-specific analyses. For new epitope information, users of this database can try the Immuno Epitope Database (http://www.immuneepitope.org).

Proper citation: HCV Immunology Database (RRID:SCR_007086) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_013331

    This resource has 1000+ mentions.

http://PlasmoDB.org

Functional genomic database for malaria parasites. Database for Plasmodium spp. Provides resource for data analysis and visualization in gene-by-gene or genome-wide scale. PlasmoDB 5.5 contains annotated genomes, evidence of transcription, proteomics evidence, protein function evidence, population biology and evolution data. Data can be queried by selecting from query grid or drop down menus. Results can be combined with each other on query history page. Search results can be downloaded with associated functional data and registered users can store their query history for future retrieval or analysis.Key community database for malaria researchers, intersecting many types of laboratory and computational data, aggregated by gene.

Proper citation: PlasmoDB (RRID:SCR_013331) Copy   


http://www.viprbrc.org/brc/home.do?decorator=vipr

Provides searchable public repository of genomic, proteomic and other research data for different strains of pathogenic viruses along with suite of tools for analyzing data. Data can be shared, aggregated, analyzed using ViPR tools, and downloaded for local analysis. ViPR is an NIAID-funded resource that support the research of viral pathogens in the NIAID Category A-C Priority Pathogen lists and those causing (re)emerging infectious diseases. It provides a dedicated gateway to SARS-CoV-2 data that integrates data from external sources (GenBank, UniProt, Immune Epitope Database, Protein Data Bank), direct submissions, analysis pipelines and expert curation, and provides a suite of bioinformatics analysis and visualization tools for virology research.

Proper citation: Virus Pathogen Resource (ViPR) (RRID:SCR_012983) Copy   


http://www-sequence.stanford.edu/group/candida/

The Stanford Genome Technology Center began a whole genome shotgun sequencing of strain SC5314 of Candida albicans. After reaching its original goal of 1.5X mean coverage of the haploid genome (16Mb) in summer, 1998, Stanford was awarded a supplemental grant to continue sequencing up to a coverage of 10X, performing as much assembly of the sequence as possible, using recognizable genes as nucleation points. Candida albicans is one of the most commonly encountered human pathogens, causing a wide variety of infections ranging from mucosal infections in generally healthy persons to life-threatening systemic infections in individuals with impaired immunity. Oral and esophogeal Candida infections are frequently seen in AIDS patients. Few classes of drugs are effective against these fungal infections, and all of them have limitations with regard to efficacy and side-effects.

Proper citation: Sequencing of Candida Albicans (RRID:SCR_013437) Copy   


https://www.delaneycare.org/index.php

The Collaboratory of AIDS Researchers for Eradication (CARE) is a consortium of scientific experts in the field of HIV latency from several U.S. and European academic research institutions as well as Merck Research Laboratories working together to find a cure for HIV.

Proper citation: Collaboratory of AIDS Researchers for Eradciation (CARE) (RRID:SCR_013681) Copy   


https://www.itntrialshare.org/

Immune tolerance data management and visualization portal for studies sponsored by Immune Tolerance Network (ITN) and collaborating investigators. Data from published studies are accessible to any user; data from current in-progress studies are accessible to study investigators and collaborators. Includes links to published Figures, tools for visualization and analysis of data, and ability to query study data by subject, group, or any other study parameter.

Proper citation: Immune Tolerance Network TrialShare (RRID:SCR_013699) Copy   


http://www.citisletstudy.org/

Network of clinical centers and a data coordinating center established to conduct studies of islet transplantation in patients with type 1 diabetes.

Proper citation: Clinical Islet Transplantation Consortium (CITC) (RRID:SCR_014385) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_014356

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

https://vdjserver.org/

A web application immune repertoire management, analysis, and archiving. Users can collaborate and share data either privately or publicly. Users can perform a variety of tasks, such as create and share projects with other users, conduct pre-processing tasks on single end reads, run IgBlast, and obtain basic repertoire characterization results for B cell receptor and T cell receptor repertoires.

Proper citation: VDJ Server (RRID:SCR_014356) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_014606

    This resource has 500+ mentions.

http://rast.nmpdr.org

A SEED-quality automated service that annotates complete or nearly complete bacterial and archaeal genomes across the entire phylogenetic tree. RAST can also be used to analyze draft genomes.

Proper citation: RAST Server (RRID:SCR_014606) Copy   


http://www.ctotstudies.org

Project portal for a cooperative research program to improve short and long-term graft and patient survival. CTOT is an investigative consortium for conducting clinical and associated mechanistic studies that will lead to improved outcomes for transplant recipients.

Proper citation: Clinical Trials in Organ Transplantation (CTOT) (RRID:SCR_015859) Copy   


http://www.ctotc.org

Project portal for a cooperative research program sponsored by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID). CTOT-C is an investigative consortium for conducting clinical and associated mechanistic studies that will lead to improved outcomes for pediatric heart, lung, or kidney transplant recipients.

Proper citation: Clinical Trials in Organ Transplantation in Children (CTOT-C) (RRID:SCR_015860) Copy   


https://metadatacenter.org

Develops information technologies that make authoring complete metadata more manageable. Its products aim to facilitate using the metadata in further research.Center to improve metadata and its use throughout biomedical sciences. Develops information technologies that make authoring complete metadata more manageable through better interfaces, terminology, metadata practices, and analytics. Optimizes metadata pathway from provider to end user. Provides way for funders to specify what metadata they want to collect as part of research life cycle.

Proper citation: Center for Expanded Data Annotation and Retrieval (RRID:SCR_016269) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_016599

    This resource has 100+ mentions.

https://pave.niaid.nih.gov

Collection of curated papillomavirus genomic sequences, accompanied by web-based sequence analysis tools. Database and web applications support the storage, annotation, analysis, and exchange of information.

Proper citation: PaVE (RRID:SCR_016599) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_016615

https://bioinformatics.niaid.nih.gov/hasp

Web server to visualize phylogenetic, biochemical, and immunological hemagglutinin data in the three-dimensional context of homology models. Database and structural visualization platform for comparative models of influenza A hemagglutinin proteins.

Proper citation: HASP (RRID:SCR_016615) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_016887

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

https://csgid.org/csgid/metal_sites

Metal binding site validation server. Used for systematic inspection of the metal-binding architectures in macromolecular structures. The validation parameters that CMM examines cover the entire binding environment of the metal ion, including the position, charge and type of atoms and residues surrounding the metal.

Proper citation: CheckMyMetal (RRID:SCR_016887) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_017125

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

https://immunedb.readthedocs.io/en/latest/

Software system for storing and analyzing high throughput B and T cell immune receptor sequencing data. Comprised of web interface and of Python analysis tools to process raw reads for gene usage, infer clones, aggregate data, and run downstream analyses, or in conjunction with other AIRR tools using its import and export features.

Proper citation: ImmuneDB (RRID:SCR_017125) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_007821

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://www.nmpdr.org/FIG/wiki/view.cgi

The National Microbial Pathogen Data Resource provides curated annotations in an environment for comparative analysis of genomes and biological subsystems, with an emphasis on the food-borne pathogens Campylobacter, Listeria, Staphylococcus, Streptococcus, and Vibrio; as well as the STD pathogens Chlamydiaceae, Haemophilus, Mycoplasma, Neisseria, Treponema, and Ureaplasma. This edition of the NMPDR includes 47 archaeal, 725 bacterial, and 29 eukaryal genomes with 3,257,100 genetic features, of which 1,338,895 are in FIGfams curated using 616 active subsystems. ''''''Notice to NMPDR Users'''''' - The NMPDR BRC contract ended in December 2009. At that time we ceased maintenance of the NMPDR web resource and data. Bacterial data from NMPDR has been transferred to PATRIC (http://www.patricbrc.org), a new consolidated BRC for all NIAID category A-C priority pathogenic bacteria. NMPDR was a collaboration among researchers from the Computation Institute of the University of Chicago, the Fellowship for Interpretation of Genomes (FIG), Argonne National Laboratory, and the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois.

Proper citation: NMPDR (RRID:SCR_007821) Copy   



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