Searching the RRID Resource Information Network

Our searching services are busy right now. Please try again later

  • Register
X
Forgot Password

If you have forgotten your password you can enter your email here and get a temporary password sent to your email.

X

Leaving Community

Are you sure you want to leave this community? Leaving the community will revoke any permissions you have been granted in this community.

No
Yes
X
Forgot Password

If you have forgotten your password you can enter your email here and get a temporary password sent to your email.

Preparing word cloud

×

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.

Search

Type in a keyword to search

Filter by records added date
See new records

Options


Current Facets and Filters

  • Keywords:sequence (facet)

Facets


Recent searches

Snippet view Table view
Click the to add this resource to a Collection

569 Results - per page

Show More Columns | Download 569 Result(s)

Resource Name Proper Citation Abbreviations Resource Type Description Keywords Resource Relationships Related Condition Funding Defining Citation Availability Website Status Alternate IDs Alternate URLs Old URLs Parent Organization Resource ID Synonyms Record Last Update Mentions Count
Interolog/Regulog Database
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
1+ mentions
Interolog/Regulog Database (RRID:SCR_000755) data or information resource, database Interolog/Regulog quantitatively assess the degree to which interologs can be reliably transferred between species as a function of the sequence similarity of the corresponding interacting proteins. interacting, interolog, protein, regulog, sequence, bio.tools is listed by: bio.tools
is listed by: Debian
has parent organization: Yale University; Connecticut; USA
PMID:15173116 nif-0000-20863, biotools:interolog https://bio.tools/interolog SCR_000755 Interolog 2026-02-11 10:56:07 2
GTEx eQTL Browser
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
100+ mentions
GTEx eQTL Browser (RRID:SCR_001618) data or information resource, database Database and browser that provides a central resource to archive and display association between genetic variation and high-throughput molecular-level phenotypes. This effort originated with the NIH GTEx roadmap project: however the scope of this resource will be extended to include any available genotype/molecular phenotype datasets. genetic variation, high-throughput, phenotype, genotype, molecular, molecule, gene, gene expression, snp, trait, expression, quantitative trait locus, expression quantitative trait locus, genome, probe, sequence, statistics, p-value, rna-seq, array, lymphoblastoid, liver, cerebellum, frontal cortex, temporal cortex, pons, gene regulation, tissue, mrna, data set has parent organization: NCBI NIH Common Fund 268201000029C-4-0-2 Free, Freely available nlx_153884 http://www.gtexportal.org/home/ SCR_001618 NCBI GTEx eQTL Browser, Genotype-Tissue Expression eQTL Browser, GTEx (Genotype-Tissue Expression) eQTL Browser, NCBI GTeX eQTL Browser 2026-02-11 10:56:16 111
Neurospora crassa Database
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
1+ mentions
Neurospora crassa Database (RRID:SCR_001372) NCD data or information resource, database It's strategy involves Whole Genome Shotgun (WGS) sequencing, in which sequence from the entire genome is generated and reassembled. This method is standard for microbial genome sequencing, and has been successfully applied to Drosophila. Neurospora is an ideal candidate for this approach because of the low repeat content of the genome. Neurospora crassa Database has expanded the scope of its database by including a mitochondrial annotation, incorporating information from the Neurospora compendium, and assigning NCU numbers to tRNA and rRNAs. They have improved the annotation process to predict untranslated regions and to reduce the number of spurious predictions. As a result, version 3 contains 9,826 genes, 794 fewer than version 2. During the initial phase of a WGS project they sequence both ends of the 4 kb inserts from a plasmid library prepared using randomly sheared and sized-selected DNA. The shotgun reads are assembled by recognizing overlapping regions of sequence and making use of the knowledge of the orientation and distance of the paired reads from each plasmid. Obtaining deep sequence coverage though high levels of sequence redundancy assures that the majority of the genome is represented in the initial assembly and that the consensus sequence is of high quality. Their approach toward the initial assembly was conservative, meaning they would rather fail to join sequence contigs that might overlap each other than risk making false joins between two closely related but non-overlapping genomic regions. Hence, the initial assembly contains many sequence contigs and over time these contigs will increase in size and decrease in number as they are joined together. After shotgun sequencing and assembly there was a second phase of sequencing in which additional sequence was obtained from specific regions that were missing from the original assembly or are recognized to be of low quality in the consensus. The Neurospora crassa sequencing project reflects a close collaboration between the Broad Institute and the Neurospora research community. Principal investigators include Bruce Birren and Chad Nusbaum from the Broad Institute, Matt Sachs at the Oregon Graduate Institute of Science and Technology, Chuck Staben at the University of Kentucky and Jak Kinsey at the Fungal Genetics Stock Center at the University of Kansas Medical Center. In addition, we have a larger Advisory Board made up of a number of Neurospora researchers. Sponsors: They have been funded by the National Science Foundation to sequence the N. crassa genome and make the information publicly available. gene, annotation, compendium, contig, distance, drosophila, genome, mitochondrial, neurospora crassa, plasmid, region, rrna, sequence, trna, untranslated Free, Freely available, nif-0000-20965 http://www.broadinstitute.org/annotation/genome/neurospora/Home.html SCR_001372 Neurospora crassa Database 2026-02-11 10:56:13 4
UniProt
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
10000+ mentions
UniProt (RRID:SCR_002380) UniProt data or information resource, database Collection of data of protein sequence and functional information. Resource for protein sequence and annotation data. Consortium for preservation of the UniProt databases: UniProt Knowledgebase (UniProtKB), UniProt Reference Clusters (UniRef), and UniProt Archive (UniParc), UniProt Proteomes. Collaboration between European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI), SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics and Protein Information Resource. Swiss-Prot is a curated subset of UniProtKB. collection, protein, sequence, annotation, data, functional, information is used by: LIPID MAPS Proteome Database
is used by: ChannelPedia
is used by: Open PHACTS
is used by: DisGeNET
is used by: Smart Dictionary Lookup
is used by: MitoMiner
is used by: Cytokine Registry
is used by: MobiDB
is used by: Pathway Analysis Tool for Integration and Knowledge Acquisition
is used by: Phospho.ELM
is used by: GEROprotectors
is used by: SwissLipids
is recommended by: NIDDK Information Network (dkNET)
is recommended by: National Library of Medicine
is recommended by: NIDDK - National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
is listed by: re3data.org
is listed by: LabWorm
is related to: Clustal W2
is related to: UniProt DAS
is related to: UniParc at the EBI
is related to: ProDom
is related to: LegumeIP
is related to: Pathway Commons
is related to: NIH Data Sharing Repositories
is related to: FlyMine
is related to: IMEx - The International Molecular Exchange Consortium
is related to: 3D-Interologs
is related to: Biomine
is related to: EBIMed
is related to: STOP
is related to: Coremine Medical
is related to: BioExtract
is related to: STRAP
is related to: GOTaxExplorer
is related to: GoAnnotator
is related to: IT-GOM: Integrated Tool for IC-based GO Semantic Similarity Measures
is related to: Whatizit
is related to: MOPED - Model Organism Protein Expression Database
is related to: Polbase
is related to: PredictSNP
is related to: PSICQUIC Registry
is related to: IntAct
is related to: p300db
is related to: UniProt Proteomes
is related to: SARS-CoV-2 mutation effects and 3D structure prediction from sequence covariation
has parent organization: European Bioinformatics Institute
has parent organization: SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics
has parent organization: Protein Information Resource
is parent organization of: UniProtKB
is parent organization of: NEWT
is parent organization of: UniParc
is parent organization of: UniProt Chordata protein annotation program
is parent organization of: UniRef
works with: Genotate
works with: CellPhoneDB
works with: MOLEonline
works with: MiMeDB
NHGRI U41 HG006104;
NHGRI P41 HG02273;
NIGMS 5R01GM080646;
NIGMS R01 GM080646;
NLM G08 LM010720;
NCRR P20 RR016472;
NSF DBI-0850319;
British Heart Foundation ;
NEI ;
NHLBI ;
NIA ;
NIAID ;
NIDDK ;
NIMH ;
NCI ;
EMBL ;
PDUK ;
ARUK ;
NHGRI U24 HG007722
PMID:19843607
PMID:18836194
PMID:18045787
PMID:17142230
PMID:16381842
PMID:15608167
PMID:14681372
nif-0000-00377, SCR_018750, r3d100010357 http://www.ebi.uniprot.org
http://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/
http://www.pir.uniprot.org
ftp://ftp.uniprot.org
https://doi.org/10.17616/R3BW2M
SCR_002380 , The Universal Protein Resource, Universal Protein Resource, UNIPROT Universal Protein Resource 2026-02-11 10:56:28 17565
Human Proteomics Initiative
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
Human Proteomics Initiative (RRID:SCR_002373) HPI data or information resource, database THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on August 03, 2011. IT HAS BEEN REPLACED BY A NEW UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot ANNOTATION PROGRAM CALLED UniProt Chordata protein annotation program. The Human Proteome Initiative (HPI) aims to annotate all known human protein sequences, as well as their orthologous sequences in other mammals, according to the quality standards of UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot. In addition to accurate sequences, we strive to provide, for each protein, a wealth of information that includes the description of its function, domain structure, subcellular location, similarities to other proteins, etc. Although as complete as currently possible, the human protein set they provide is still imperfect, it will have to be reviewed and updated with future research results. They will also create entries for newly discovered human proteins, increase the number of splice variants, explore the full range of post-translational modifications (PTMs) and continue to build a comprehensive view of protein variation in the human population. The availability of the human genome sequence has enabled the exploration and exploitation of the human genome and proteome to begin. Research has now focused on the annotation of the genome and in particular of the proteome. With expert annotation extracted from the literature by biologists as the foundation, it has been possible to expand into the areas of data mining and automatic annotation. With further development and integration of pattern recognition methods and the application of alignments clustering, proteome analysis can now be provided in a meaningful way. These various approaches have been integrated to attach, extract and combine as much relevant information as possible to the proteome. This resource should be valuable to users from both research and industry. We maintain a file containing all human UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot entries. This file is updated at every biweekly release of UniProt and can be downloaded by FTP download, HTTP download or by using a mirroring program which automatically retrieves the file at regular intervals. function, gene, alignment, biologist, clustering, coding, development, genome, human, location, mammalian, modification, ortholog, population, post-translational, protein, proteome, proteomic, proteomics, sequence, splice, structure, subcellular, variant, variation, gold standard is related to: UniProt Chordata protein annotation program
has parent organization: SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics
PMID:11301130 THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE nif-0000-21199 SCR_002373 Human Proteome Initiative, UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot Human Proteome Initiative 2026-02-11 10:56:31 0
AceView
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
100+ mentions
AceView (RRID:SCR_002277) AceView/WormGenes data or information resource, database THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented May 10, 2017. A pilot effort that has developed a centralized, web-based biospecimen locator that presents biospecimens collected and stored at participating Arizona hospitals and biospecimen banks, which are available for acquisition and use by researchers. Researchers may use this site to browse, search and request biospecimens to use in qualified studies. The development of the ABL was guided by the Arizona Biospecimen Consortium (ABC), a consortium of hospitals and medical centers in the Phoenix area, and is now being piloted by this Consortium under the direction of ABRC. You may browse by type (cells, fluid, molecular, tissue) or disease. Common data elements decided by the ABC Standards Committee, based on data elements on the National Cancer Institute''s (NCI''s) Common Biorepository Model (CBM), are displayed. These describe the minimum set of data elements that the NCI determined were most important for a researcher to see about a biospecimen. The ABL currently does not display information on whether or not clinical data is available to accompany the biospecimens. However, a requester has the ability to solicit clinical data in the request. Once a request is approved, the biospecimen provider will contact the requester to discuss the request (and the requester''s questions) before finalizing the invoice and shipment. The ABL is available to the public to browse. In order to request biospecimens from the ABL, the researcher will be required to submit the requested required information. Upon submission of the information, shipment of the requested biospecimen(s) will be dependent on the scientific and institutional review approval. Account required. Registration is open to everyone., documented August 29, 2016. AceView offers an integrated view of the human, nematode and Arabidopsis genes reconstructed by co-alignment of all publicly available mRNAs and ESTs on the genome sequence. Our goals are to offer a reliable up-to-date resource on the genes and their functions and to stimulate further validating experiments at the bench. AceView provides a curated, comprehensive and non-redundant sequence representation of all public mRNA sequences (mRNAs from GenBank or RefSeq, and single pass cDNA sequences from dbEST and Trace). These experimental cDNA sequences are first co-aligned on the genome then clustered into a minimal number of alternative transcript variants and grouped into genes. Using exhaustively and with high quality standards the available cDNA sequences evidences the beauty and complexity of mammals' transcriptome, and the relative simplicity of the nematode and plant transcriptomes. Genes are classified according to their inferred coding potential; many presumably non-coding genes are discovered. Genes are named by Entrez Gene names when available, else by AceView gene names, stable from release to release. Alternative features (promoters, introns and exons, polyadenylation signals) and coding potential, including motifs, domains, and homologies are annotated in depth; tissues where expression has been observed are listed in order of representation; diseases, phenotypes, pathways, functions, localization or interactions are annotated by mining selected sources, in particular PubMed, GAD and Entrez Gene, and also by performing manual annotation, especially in the worm. In this way, both the anatomy and physiology of the experimentally cDNA supported human, mouse and nematode genes are thoroughly annotated. Our goals are to offer an up-to-date resource on the genes, in the hope to stimulate further experiments at the bench, or to help medical research. AceView can be queried by meaningful words or groups of words as well as by most standard identifiers, such as gene names, Entrez Gene ID, UniGene ID, GenBank accessions. est, exon, expression, function, gene, alignment, arabidopsis, cdna, co-alignment, coding, disease, genome, genomic, human, intron, localization, mammal, mouse, mrna, nematode, pathway, phenotype, plant, polyadenylation, promoter, rat, sequence, signal, tissue, transcript, transcriptome, worm, blast, gold standard has parent organization: NCBI THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE nif-0000-21007, r3d100010651 https://doi.org/10.17616/R3260G http://www.ncbi.nih.gov/IEB/Research/Acembly/ SCR_002277 AceView genes, AceView/WormGenes, The AceView Genes 2026-02-11 10:56:29 186
LSPD
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
1+ mentions
LSPD (RRID:SCR_002125) LSPD data or information resource, database LSPD provides liver specific gene. It lists ~300 promoter regions responsible for liver specific transcriptions, collect ~400 experimentally verified regulatory regions and elements, provide information on transcription regulation of liver genes, compare transcription regulation of functionally or evolutionarily related genes, and retrieve sequences of the promoter region. Its regulatory elements provides information on transcription regulatory elements, reports the methods for verification of the elements, records binding affinity and regulatory function, and summarizes the site distribution and sequence consensus. liver gene, promoter region, regulatory region, sequence, transcription Free, Freely Available nif-0000-20920 SCR_002125 The Liver Specific Gene Promoter Database 2026-02-11 10:56:23 6
Conserved Domain Database
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
100+ mentions
Conserved Domain Database (RRID:SCR_002077) CDD data or information resource, database Database of annotations of functional units in proteins including multiple sequence alignment models for ancient domains and full-length proteins. This collection of models includes 3D structures that display the sequence/structure/function relationships in proteins. It also includes alignments of the domains to known three-dimensional protein structures in the MMDB database. The source databases are Pfam, Smart, and COG. Users can identify amino acids in protein sequences with the resources available as well as view single sequences embedded within multiple sequence alignments. protein, amino acid sequence, nucleic acid, 3d structure, annotation, function, sequence, structure, amino acid, gold standard is used by: Mutation Annotation and Genomic Interpretation
is listed by: re3data.org
is related to: Pfam
is related to: SMART
is related to: COG
is related to: NCBI Structure
has parent organization: NCBI
works with: Conserved Domains Search
PMID:25414356
PMID:18984618
nif-0000-02647 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?db=cdd SCR_002077 Conserved Domains Database, Conserved Domains 2026-02-11 10:56:22 306
Full-Malaria: Malaria Full-Length cDNA Database
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
1+ mentions
Full-Malaria: Malaria Full-Length cDNA Database (RRID:SCR_002348) data or information resource, database FULL-malaria is a database for a full-length-enriched cDNA library from the human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. Because of its medical importance, this organism is the first target for genome sequencing of a eukaryotic pathogen; the sequences of two of its 14 chromosomes have already been determined. However, for the full exploitation of this rapidly accumulating information, correct identification of the genes and study of their expression are essential. Using the oligo-capping method, this database has produced a full-length-enriched cDNA library from erythrocytic stage parasites and performed one-pass reading. The database consists of nucleotide sequences of 2490 random clones that include 390 (16%) known malaria genes according to BLASTN analysis of the nr-nt database in GenBank; these represent 98 genes, and the clones for 48 of these genes contain the complete protein-coding sequence (49%). On the other hand, comparisons with the complete chromosome 2 sequence revealed that 35 of 210 predicted genes are expressed, and in addition led to detection of three new gene candidates that were not previously known. In total, 19 of these 38 clones (50%) were full-length. From these observations, it is expected that the database contains approximately 1000 genes, including 500 full-length clones. It should be an invaluable resource for the development of vaccines and novel drugs. Full-malaria has been updated in at least three points. (i) 8934 sequences generated from the addition of new libraries added so that the database collection of 11,424 full-length cDNAs covers 1375 (25%) of the estimated number of the entire 5409 parasite genes. (ii) All of its full-length cDNAs and GenBank EST sequences were mapped to genomic sequences together with publicly available annotated genes and other predictions. This precisely determined the gene structures and positions of the transcriptional start sites, which are indispensable for the identification of the promoter regions. (iii) A total of 4257 cDNA sequences were newly generated from murine malaria parasites, Plasmodium yoelii yoelii. The genome/cDNA sequences were compared at both nucleotide and amino acid levels, with those of P.falciparum, and the sequence alignment for each gene is presented graphically. This part of the database serves as a versatile platform to elucidate the function(s) of malaria genes by a comparative genomic approach. It should also be noted that all of the cDNAs represented in this database are supported by physical cDNA clones, which are publicly and freely available, and should serve as indispensable resources to explore functional analyses of malaria genomes. Sponsors: This database has been constructed and maintained by a Grant-in-Aid for Publication of Scientific Research Results from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS). This work was also supported by a Special Coordination Funds for Promoting Science and Technology from the Science and Technology Agency of Japan (STA) and a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Priority Areas from the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture of Japan. drug, eukaryotic, expression, function, gene, alignment, amino acid, cdna, chromosome, clone, coding, comparative, genome, genomic, human, malaria, medical, nucleotide, oligo-capping, organism, parasite, pathogen, physical, plasmodium falciparum, promoter, protein, region, sequence, sequencing, unicellular eukaryote genome databases, vaccine has parent organization: University of Tokyo; Tokyo; Japan PMID:18987005
PMID:14681428
nif-0000-21157 SCR_002348 Full-Malaria 2026-02-11 10:56:27 2
Peptide Sequence Database
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
Peptide Sequence Database (RRID:SCR_005764) PepSeqDB data or information resource, database The Peptide Sequence Database contains putative peptide sequences from human, mouse, rat, and zebrafish. Compressed to eliminate redundancy, these are about 40 fold smaller than a brute force enumeration. Current and old releases are available for download. Each species'' peptide sequence database comprises peptide sequence data from releveant species specific UniGene and IPI clusters, plus all sequences from their consituent EST, mRNA and protein sequence databases, namely RefSeq proteins and mRNAs, UniProt''s SwissProt and TrEMBL, GenBank mRNA, ESTs, and high-throughput cDNAs, HInv-DB, VEGA, EMBL, IPI protein sequences, plus the enumeration of all combinations of UniProt sequence variants, Met loss PTM, and signal peptide cleavages. The README file contains some information about the non amino-acid symbols O (digest site corresponding to a protein N- or C-terminus) and J (no digest sequence join) used in these peptide sequence databases and information about how to configure various search engines to use them. Some search engines handle (very) long sequences badly and in some cases must be patched to use these peptide sequence databases. All search engines supported by the PepArML meta-search engine can (or can be patched to) successfully search these peptide sequence databases. peptide, sequence has parent organization: Edwards Lab nlx_149230 SCR_005764 2026-02-11 10:57:13 0
TranspoGene
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
1+ mentions
TranspoGene (RRID:SCR_005634) data or information resource, database A publicly available database of Transposed elements (TEs) which are located within protein-coding genes of 7 organisms: human, mouse, chicken, zebrafish, fruilt fly, nematode and sea squirt. Using TranspoGene the user can learn about the many aspects of the effect these TEs have on their hosting genes, such as: exonization events (including alternative splicing-related data), insertion of TEs into introns, exons, and promoters, specific location of the TE over the gene, evolutionary divergence of the TE from its consensus sequence and involvement in diseases. TranspoGene database is quickly searchable through its website, enables many kinds of searches and is available for download. TranspoGene contains information regarding specific type and family of the TEs, genomic and mRNA location, sequence, supporting transcript accession and alignment to the TE consensus sequence. The database also contains host gene specific data: gene name, genomic location, Swiss-Prot and RefSeq accessions, diseases associated with the gene and splicing pattern. The TranspoGene and microTranspoGene databases can be used by researchers interested in the effect of TE insertion on the eukaryotic transcriptome. element, eukaryotic, evolutionary, exon, exonization, family, fruit fly, gene, genome, alternative, chicken, coding, disease, divergence, genomic, hosting, human, human genome databases, intron, location, map, maps, mouse, mrna, nematode, organism, pattern, promoter, protein, sea squirt, sequence, splicing, transcript, transcriptome, transposed, viewers, worm, zebrafish has parent organization: Tel Aviv University; Ramat Aviv; Israel nif-0000-03579 SCR_005634 TranspoGene 2026-02-11 10:57:11 9
DBETH - Database for Bacterial ExoToxins for Humans
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
1+ mentions
DBETH - Database for Bacterial ExoToxins for Humans (RRID:SCR_005908) DBETH data or information resource, database Database of Bacterial ExoToxins for Human is a database of sequences, structures, interaction networks and analytical results for 229 exotoxins, from 26 different human pathogenic bacterial genus. All toxins are classified into 24 different Toxin classes. The aim of DBETH is to provide a comprehensive database for human pathogenic bacterial exotoxins. DBETH also provides a platform to its users to identify potential exotoxin like sequences through Homology based as well as Non-homology based methods. In homology based approach the users can identify potential exotoxin like sequences either running BLASTp against the toxin sequences or by running HMMER against toxin domains identified by DBETH from human pathogenic bacterial exotoxins. In Non-homology based part DBETH uses a machine learning approach to identify potential exotoxins (Toxin Prediction by Support Vector Machine based approach). sequence, structure, interaction network, human, pathogen, bacterial genus, toxin, bacteria, exotoxin, homology, homolog, structure, sequence, domain, prediction, mechanism, activity, bio.tools is listed by: Debian
is listed by: bio.tools
has parent organization: CSIR - Indian Institute of Chemical Biology; Kolkata; India
Council of Scientific and Industrial Research; New Delhi; India PMID:22102573 nlx_149481, biotools:dbeth https://bio.tools/dbeth SCR_005908 Database for Bacterial ExoToxins for Humans 2026-02-11 10:57:16 2
TRANSFAC
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
100+ mentions
TRANSFAC (RRID:SCR_005620) TRANSFAC data or information resource, database Manually curated database of eukaryotic transcription factors, their genomic binding sites and DNA binding profiles. Used to predict potential transcription factor binding sites. Curated, eucaryotic, transcription, factor, genomic, binding, site, sequence, regulated, gene, bio.tools is listed by: OMICtools
is listed by: Debian
is listed by: bio.tools
is listed by: Gene Regulation Databases
is related to: TRANSPATH
is related to: Babelomics
is related to: GeneTrail
works with: rVista
European Commission ;
German Ministry of Education and Research
PMID:12520026 Free, Freely available biotools:transfac, nif-0000-03576 http://www.biobase-international.com/pages/index.php?id=transfac
http://gene-regulation.com/pub/databases.html
https://bio.tools/transfac
SCR_005620 2026-02-11 10:57:08 261
Kabat Database of Sequences of Proteins of Immunological Interest
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
1+ mentions
Kabat Database of Sequences of Proteins of Immunological Interest (RRID:SCR_006465) data or information resource, database The Kabat Database determines the combining site of antibodies based on the available amino acid sequences. The precise delineation of complementarity determining regions (CDR) of both light and heavy chains provides the first example of how properly aligned sequences can be used to derive structural and functional information of biological macromolecules. The Kabat database now includes nucleotide sequences, sequences of T cell receptors for antigens (TCR), major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I and II molecules, and other proteins of immunological interest. The Kabat Database searching and analysis tools package is an ASP.NET web-based portal containing lookup tools, sequence matching tools, alignment tools, length distribution tools, positional correlation tools and much more. The searching and analysis tools are custom made for the aligned data sets contained in both the SQL Server and ASCII text flat file formats. The searching and analysis tools may be run on a single PC workstation or in a distributed environment. The analysis tools are written in ASP.NET and C# and are available in Visual Studio .NET 2003/2005/2008 formats. The Kabat Database was initially started in 1970 to determine the combining site of antibodies based on the available amino acid sequences at that time. Bence Jones proteins, mostly from human, were aligned, using the now-known Kabat numbering system, and a quantitative measure, variability, was calculated for every position. Three peaks, at positions 24-34, 50-56 and 89-97, were identified and proposed to form the complementarity determining regions (CDR) of light chains. Subsequently, antibody heavy chain amino acid sequences were also aligned using a different numbering system, since the locations of their CDRs (31-35B, 50-65 and 95-102) are different from those of the light chains. CDRL1 starts right after the first invariant Cys 23 of light chains, while CDRH1 is eight amino acid residues away from the first invariant Cys 22 of heavy chains. During the past 30 years, the Kabat database has grown to include nucleotide sequences, sequences of T cell receptors for antigens (TCR), major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I and II molecules and other proteins of immunological interest. It has been used extensively by immunologists to derive useful structural and functional information from the primary sequences of these proteins. functional, align, alignment, amino acid, antibody, antigen, biological, cdr, chain, class i, class ii, combining, complementarity, complex, delineation, heavy, histocompatibility, human, immunological, immunological database, light, macromolecule, mhc, molecule, nucleotide, position, protein, receptor, region, sequence, structural, t cell has parent organization: Northwestern University; Illinois; USA nif-0000-21233 SCR_006465 Kabat Database 2026-02-11 10:57:20 2
IndelFR - Indel Flanking Region Database
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
1+ mentions
IndelFR - Indel Flanking Region Database (RRID:SCR_006050) IndelFR data or information resource, database THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVCE, documented September 2, 2016. Indel Flanking Region Database is an online resource for indels and the flanking regions of proteins in SCOP superfamilies, including amino acid sequences, lengths, locations, secondary structure constitutions, hydrophilicity / hydrophobicity, domain information, 3D structures and so on. It aims at providing a comprehensive dataset for analyzing the qualities of amino acid insertion/deletions(indels), substitutions and the relationship between them. The indels were obtained through the pairwise alignment of homologous structures in SCOP superfamilies. The IndelFR database contains 2,925,017 indels with flanking regions extracted from 373,402 structural alignment pairs of 12,573 non-redundant domains from 1053 superfamilies. IndelFR has already been used for molecular evolution studies and may help to promote future functional studies of indels and their flanking regions. indel, flanking region, protein, structural domain, domain, protein superfamily, protein structure, insertion/deletion, insertion, deletion, protein sequence, sequence, structure, protein domain, bio.tools is listed by: Debian
is listed by: bio.tools
is related to: SCOP: Structural Classification of Proteins
is related to: Research Collaboratory for Structural Bioinformatics Protein Data Bank (RCSB PDB)
has parent organization: Shandong University; Shandong; China
Independent Innovation Foundation of Shandong University 2009JC006;
National Natural Science Foundation of China 30970092;
National Natural Science Foundation of China 61070017;
Scientific Research Reward Fund for excellent Young and Middle-Aged scientists in Shandong Province 20090451326
PMID:22127860 THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE biotools:indelfr, nlx_151448 https://bio.tools/indelfr SCR_006050 IndelFR: Indel Flanking Region Database, Indel Flanking Region Database 2026-02-11 10:57:18 2
FunTree
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
1+ mentions
FunTree (RRID:SCR_006014) FunTree data or information resource, database FunTree provides a range of data resources to detect the evolution of enzyme function within distant structurally related clusters within domain super families as determined by CATH. To access the resource enter a specific CATH superfamily code or search for a structure / sequence / function (either via a EC code or KEGG ligand / reaction ID, PDB ID or UniProtKB ID). Or browse the resource via superfamily / function / structure / metabolites & reactions via the menu on the left panel. FunTree is a new resource that brings together sequence, structure, phylogenetic, chemical and mechanistic information for structurally defined enzyme superfamilies. Gathering together this range of data into a single resource allows the investigation of how novel enzyme functions have evolved within a structurally defined superfamily as well as providing a means to analyse trends across many superfamilies. This is done not only within the context of an enzyme''''s sequence and structure but also the relationships of their reactions. Developed in tandem with the CATH database, it currently comprises 276 superfamilies covering 1800 (70%) of sequence assigned enzyme reactions. Central to the resource are phylogenetic trees generated from structurally informed multiple sequence alignments using both domain structural alignments supplemented with domain sequences and whole sequence alignments based on commonality of multi-domain architectures. These trees are decorated with functional annotations such as metabolite similarity as well as annotations from manually curated resources such the catalytic site atlas and MACiE for enzyme mechanisms. enzyme function, enzyme superfamily, enzyme, sequence, structure, phylogenetic, chemical, mechanistic, functional annotation, superfamily, gold standard, bio.tools is listed by: Debian
is listed by: bio.tools
is related to: CATH: Protein Structure Classification
is related to: Research Collaboratory for Structural Bioinformatics Protein Data Bank (RCSB PDB)
is related to: KEGG
is related to: UniProtKB
has parent organization: European Bioinformatics Institute
European Molecular Biology Laboratory; Heidelberg; Germany ;
BBSRC ;
Wellcome Trust 081989/Z/07/A;
DOE contract DE-AC02-06CH11357
PMID:22006843 Free biotools:funtree, nlx_151402 https://bio.tools/funtree SCR_006014 2026-02-11 10:57:13 4
RAP-DB
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
500+ mentions
RAP-DB (RRID:SCR_006610) RAP-DB data or information resource, database Database that provides the genome sequence assembly of the International Rice Genome Sequencing Project (IRGSP), manually curated annotation of the sequence, and other genomics information that could be useful for comprehensive understanding of the rice biology. RAP-DB contains clone positions, structures and functions of genes validated by cDNAs, RNA genes detected by massively parallel signature sequencing (MPSS) technology and sequence similarity, flanking sequences of mutant lines, transposable elements, etc. Other annotation data such as Gnomon can be displayed along with those of RAP for comparison. genome sequence assembly, International Rice Genome Sequencing Project, manually curated annotation, sequence, genomics information, has parent organization: National Institute of Genetics; Shizuoka; Japan
has parent organization: National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences; Ibaraki; Japan
Japanese Ministry of Education Culture Sports Science and Technology MEXT NT05-3 42996 PMID:23299411
PMID:18089549
Free, Freely available SCR_015062, nif-0000-03385 http://rapdb.lab.nig.ac.jp/ SCR_006610 Rice Annotation Project, Rice Annotation Project Database 2026-02-11 10:57:22 664
Consensus CDS
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
100+ mentions
Consensus CDS (RRID:SCR_006729) CCDS data or information resource, database Database (anonymous FTP) resulting from a collaborative effort to identify a core set of human and mouse protein coding regions that are consistently annotated and of high quality. The long term goal is to support convergence towards a standard set of gene annotations. Collaborators are EBI, NCBI, UCSC, WTSI and the initial results are also available from the participants'''' genome browser Web sites. In addition, CCDS identifiers are indicated on the relevant NCBI RefSeq and Entrez Gene records and in Map Viewer displays of RNA (RefSeq) and Gene annotations on the reference assembly. human genome sequence, human protein, mouse genome sequence, mouse protein, protein coding region, gene, genome sequence, genome, sequence, gene annotation, protein, gold standard is listed by: OMICtools
is related to: Entrez Gene
is related to: HomoloGene
is related to: MapViewer
is related to: VEGA
has parent organization: NCBI
has parent organization: European Bioinformatics Institute
has parent organization: Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute; Hinxton; United Kingdom
has parent organization: University of California at Santa Cruz; California; USA
PMID:24217909
PMID:22434842
PMID:19498102
The community can contribute to this resource, Acknowledgement requested nif-0000-02645, OMICS_01535 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/CCDS/CcdsBrowse.cgi SCR_006729 CCDS Database, NCBI Consensus CDS protein set, NCBI CCDS Database 2026-02-11 10:57:24 230
MyHits
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
10+ mentions
MyHits (RRID:SCR_006757) data or information resource, database Database devoted to protein domains. It is also a collection of tools for the investigation of the relationships between protein sequences and motifs described on them. protein, domain, motif, sequence, predictor, markov, model, gene, expression, mysql, bio.tools, FASEB list is listed by: Debian
is listed by: bio.tools
has parent organization: SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics
PMID:17545200 Free nif-0000-02962, biotools:myhits https://bio.tools/myhits SCR_006757 MyHit 2026-02-11 10:57:26 39
UniSTS
 
Resource Report
Resource Website
10+ mentions
UniSTS (RRID:SCR_006843) UniSTS data or information resource, database THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented August 22, 2016. Database of sequence tagged sites (STSs) derived from STS-based maps and other experiments. STSs are defined by PCR primer pairs and are associated with additional information such as genomic position, genes, and sequences. Chromosome maps are labeled by name of the originating organism, the map title, total markers, total UniSTSs and links to view maps as well as research documents available through PubMed, another NCBI database. The search functions within UniSTS allow the user to search by gene marker, chromosome, gene symbol and gene description terms to locate markers on specified genes. A representation of the UniSTS datasets is available by ftp. NOTE: All data from this resource have been moved to the Probe database, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/probe. You can retrieve all UniSTS records by searching the probe database using the search term unists(properties). (use brackets insead of parenthesis). Additionally, legacy data remain on the NCBI FTP Site in the UniSTS Repository (ftp://ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/pub/ProbeDB/legacy_unists). marker, primer sequence, mapping, sequence tagged site, genomic position, gene, sequence, nucleotide, nucleotide sequence, chromosome, gold standard is listed by: re3data.org
is related to: NCBI Probe
has parent organization: NCBI
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE nif-0000-03614 SCR_006843 UniSTS: Integrating Markers and Maps, NCBI UniSTS, Entrez UniSTS 2026-02-11 10:57:25 40

Can't find your Tool?

We recommend that you click next to the search bar to check some helpful tips on searches and refine your search firstly. Alternatively, please register your tool with the SciCrunch Registry by adding a little information to a web form, logging in will enable users to create a provisional RRID, but it not required to submit.

Can't find the RRID you're searching for? X
X
  1. Neuroscience Information Framework Resources

    Welcome to the NIF Resources search. From here you can search through a compilation of resources used by NIF and see how data is organized within our community.

  2. Navigation

    You are currently on the Community Resources tab looking through categories and sources that NIF has compiled. You can navigate through those categories from here or change to a different tab to execute your search through. Each tab gives a different perspective on data.

  3. Logging in and Registering

    If you have an account on NIF then you can log in from here to get additional features in NIF such as Collections, Saved Searches, and managing Resources.

  4. Searching

    Here is the search term that is being executed, you can type in anything you want to search for. Some tips to help searching:

    1. Use quotes around phrases you want to match exactly
    2. You can manually AND and OR terms to change how we search between words
    3. You can add "-" to terms to make sure no results return with that term in them (ex. Cerebellum -CA1)
    4. You can add "+" to terms to require they be in the data
    5. Using autocomplete specifies which branch of our semantics you with to search and can help refine your search
  5. Collections

    If you are logged into NIF you can add data records to your collections to create custom spreadsheets across multiple sources of data.

  6. Facets

    Here are the facets that you can filter the data by.

  7. Further Questions

    If you have any further questions please check out our FAQs Page to ask questions and see our tutorials. Click this button to view this tutorial again.