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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.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/proteinclusters
Database of related protein sequences (clusters) consisting of proteins derived from the annotations of whole genomes, organelles and plasmids. It currently limited to Archaea, Bacteria, Plants, Fungi, Protozoans, and Viruses. It contains annotation information, publications, domains, structures, and external links and analysis tools including multiple alignments, phylogenetic trees, and genomic neighborhoods (ProtMap). Data is available for download via Protein Clusters FTP
Proper citation: Protein Clusters (RRID:SCR_003459) Copy
http://linux1.softberry.com/berry.phtml?topic=plantprom&group=data&subgroup=plantprom
Annotated, non-redundant database of proximal promoter sequences for RNA polymerase II with experimentally determined transcription start site(s) (TSS) from various plant species. It contains 578 unrelated entries including 151, 396 and 31 promoters with experimentally verified TSS from monocot, dicot and other plants, respectively (April 2014). This DB presents the published promoter sequences with TSS(s) determined by direct experimental approaches and therefore serves as the most accurate source for development of computational promoter prediction tools.
Proper citation: PlantProm DB (RRID:SCR_003359) Copy
http://aps.unmc.edu/AP/main.php
Database and data analysis system dedicated to glossary, nomenclature, classification, information search, prediction, design, and statistics of Antimicrobial peptides and beyond. The peptide data stored in the APD were gleaned from the literature (PubMed, PDB, Google, and Swiss-Prot) manually in the past several years. Peptides will be registered into this database if: # they are from natural sources (bacteria, protozoa, fungi, plants, and animals); # their antimicrobial activities are demonstrated (MIC
Proper citation: APD (RRID:SCR_006606) Copy
http://bar.utoronto.ca/welcome.htm
Web-based tools for working with functional genomics and other data, including Gene Expression and Protein Tools, Molecular Markers and Mapping Tools, and Other Genomic Tools. Most are designed with the plant (mainly Arabidopsis) researcher in mind, but a couple of them can be useful to the wider research community, e.g. Mouse eFP Browser or BlastDigester. The associated paper for most tools is available.
Proper citation: BAR (RRID:SCR_006748) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/CO
Ontology that includes crop-specific trait ontologies for several economically important plants like rice, wheat, maize, potato, musa, chickpea and sorghum along with other important domains for crop research such as germplasm, passport, trait measurement scales, experimental design factors etc.
Proper citation: Crop Ontology (RRID:SCR_010299) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/PAE
THIS RESOURCES IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on April 23, 2014. REPLACED BY: Plant Ontology (PO). A controlled vocabulary of plant morphological and anatomical structures representing organs, tissues, cell types, and their biological relationships based on spatial and developmental organization. Note that this has been subsumed into the PO. This file is created by filtering plant_ontology_assert.obo to contain only terms from the plant anatomical entity branch of the PO. For more information, please see: http://palea.cgrb.oregonstate.edu/viewsvn/Poc/tags/live/
Proper citation: Plant Anatomy (RRID:SCR_010408) Copy
Open source database of curated, non-redundant set of profiles derived from published collections of experimentally defined transcription factor binding sites for multicellular eukaryotes. Consists of open data access, non-redundancy and quality. JASPAR CORE is smaller set that is non-redundant and curated. Collection of transcription factor DNA-binding preferences, modeled as matrices. These can be converted into Position Weight Matrices (PWMs or PSSMs), used for scanning genomic sequences. Web interface for browsing, searching and subset selection, online sequence analysis utility and suite of programming tools for genome-wide and comparative genomic analysis of regulatory regions. New functions include clustering of matrix models by similarity, generation of random matrices by sampling from selected sets of existing models and a language-independent Web Service applications programming interface for matrix retrieval.
Proper citation: JASPAR (RRID:SCR_003030) Copy
http://cal.tongji.edu.cn/PlantLoc/index.jsp
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on January 4,2023. An accurate web server for predicting plant protein subcellular localization by substantiality motif.
Proper citation: PlantLoc (RRID:SCR_003138) Copy
http://www.brc.riken.jp/inf/en
RIKEN BRC contributes to advancement of life science research by collecting, preserving and distributing biological resources such as experimental animals, experimental plants, cultured cell lines, genetic materials (DNA), and associated bioinformatics. The RIKEN BRC develops novel bioresources to promote scientific research and new technologies to increase the value of bioresources, and also to implement effective procedures for the preservation, quality control and usage of bioresources. The RIKEN BRC is working closely with institutions in Japan and abroad.
Proper citation: RIKEN BioResource Center (RRID:SCR_003250) Copy
https://planttfdb.gao-lab.org/
Comprehensive plant transcription factor database. Interface to allow users to search the database by IDs or free texts, to make sequence similarity search against TFs of all or individual species, and to download TF sequences for local analysis.PlantTFDB 3.0: a portal for the functional and evolutionary study of plant transcription factors
Proper citation: PLANTTFDB (RRID:SCR_003362) Copy
A Plant MicroRNA Target Expression Database to study the microRNA (miRNA) functions by inferring their target gene expression profiles among the large amount of existing microarray data. You may also predict your miRNA targets and retrieve their microarray expression data.
Proper citation: PMTED (RRID:SCR_010854) Copy
http://plntfdb.bio.uni-potsdam.de
Public database arising from efforts to identify and catalogue all plant genes involved in transcriptional control.Integrative plant transcription factor database that provides web interface to access large sets of transcription factors of several plant species, currently encompassing Arabidopsis thaliana (thale cress), Populus trichocarpa (poplar), Oryza sativa (rice), Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Ostreococcus tauri. Provides access point to its daughter databases of species-centered representation of transcription factors (OstreoTFDB, ChlamyTFDB, ArabTFDB, PoplarTFDB and RiceTFDB). Information including protein sequences, coding regions, genomic sequences, expressed sequence tags, domain architecture and scientific literature is provided for each family.
Proper citation: PlnTFDB (RRID:SCR_010899) Copy
http://lemur.amu.edu.pl/share/php/mirnest/home.php
A database of animal, plant and virus microRNA data maintained at the University of Poznan. The database provides: * 9980 miRNA candiates from 420 animal and plant species predicted in Expressed Sequence Tags * predicted targets for plant candidates * RNA-seq reads mapped to candidates from 29 species * external data from 12 databases that includes sequences, polymorphism, expression and regulation. miRNEST 1.0, it contains miRNA from 563 animals, plants and viruses plant species.
Proper citation: miRNEST (RRID:SCR_008907) Copy
http://www.dna.affrc.go.jp/PLACE/
A database of motifs found in plant cis-acting regulatory DNA elements, all from previously published reports. It covers vascular plants only. In addition to the motifs originally reported, their variations in other genes or in other plant species reported later are also compiled. The PLACE database also contains a brief description of each motif and relevant literature with PubMed ID numbers. DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank nucleotide sequence databases accession numbers will be also included. Note: As of January 2007, PLACE is no longer updated or maintained.
Proper citation: PLACE- A Database of Plant Cis-acting Regulatory DNA Elements (RRID:SCR_013428) Copy
http://prorepeat.bioinformatics.nl/
ProRepeat is an integrated curated repository and analysis platform for in-depth research on the biological characteristics of amino acid tandem repeats. ProRepeat collects repeats from all proteins included in the UniProt knowledgebase, together with 85 completely sequenced eukaryotic proteomes contained within the RefSeq collection. It contains non-redundant perfect tandem repeats, approximate tandem repeats and simple, low-complexity sequences, covering the majority of the amino acid tandem repeat patterns found in proteins. The ProRepeat web interface allows querying the repeat database using repeat characteristics like repeat unit and length, number of repetitions of the repeat unit and position of the repeat in the protein. Users can also search for repeats by the characteristics of repeat containing proteins, such as entry ID, protein description, sequence length, gene name and taxon. ProRepeat offers powerful analysis tools for finding biological interesting properties of repeats, such as the strong position bias of leucine repeats in the N-terminus of eukaryotic protein sequences, the differences of repeat abundance among proteomes, the functional classification of repeat containing proteins and GC content constrains of repeats' corresponding codons.
Proper citation: ProRepeat (RRID:SCR_006113) Copy
http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=76834&atid=835555
Open Biomedical Ontologies Tracker that allows users to browse the Plant Ontology (PO) term requests and view their status. Details include a summary, ID, status, Date opened, assignee, submitter, resolution and assigned priority. New requests are accepted from logged in users.
Proper citation: OBO Tracker: Plant Ontology (PO) TERM requests (RRID:SCR_006497) Copy
http://www.catalogueoflife.org/
Comprehensive and authoritative global index of species of animals, plants, fungi and micro-organisms. It consists of a single integrated species checklist and taxonomic hierarchy. The Catalogue holds essential information on the names, relationships and distributions of over 1.3 million species. This figure continues to rise as information is compiled from diverse sources around the world. There are two distinct versions of the Catalogue of Life: the Dynamic Checklist and the Annual Checklist. Choose the version most suited to your needs. If you have a taxonomic database and would like to join the Species 2000 federation of databases in the Catalogue of Life please contact the Species 2000 Secretariat: all candidate databases go through a peer review process. The Annual Checklist Exchange Format defines the format for exchanging data.
Proper citation: Catalogue of Life (RRID:SCR_006701) Copy
Database providing a systematic and comprehensive view of morphological phenotypes regulated by plant hormones, as well as regulatory genes participating in numerous plant hormone responses. By integrating the data from mutant studies, transgenic analysis and gene ontology annotation, genes related to the stimulus of eight plant hormones were identified, including abscisic acid, auxin, brassinosteroid, cytokinin, ethylene, gibberellin, jasmonic acid and salicylic acid. Another pronounced characteristics of this database is that a phenotype ontology was developed to precisely describe all kinds of morphological processes regulated by plant hormones with standardized vocabularies. To increase the coverage of phytohormone related genes, the database has been updated from AHD to AHD2.0 adding and integrating several pronounced features: (1) added 291 newly published Arabidopsis hormone related genes as well as corrected information (e.g. the arguable ABA receptors) based on the recent 2-year literature; (2) integrated orthologues of sequenced plants in OrthoMCLDB into each gene in the database; (3) integrated predicted miRNA splicing site in each gene in the database; (4) provided genetic relationship of these phytohormone related genes mining from literature, which represents the first effort to construct a relatively comprehensive and complex network of hormone related genes as shown in the home page of our database; (5) In convenience to in-time bioinformatics analysis, they also provided links to a powerful online analysis platform Weblab that they have recently developed, which will allow users to readily perform various sequence analysis with these phytohormone related genes retrieved from AHD2.0; (6) provided links to other protein databases as well as more expression profiling information that would facilitate users for a more systematic analysis related to phytohormone research. Please help to improve the database with your contributions.
Proper citation: Arabidopsis Hormone Database (RRID:SCR_001792) Copy
https://www.genevestigator.com/gv/
A high performance search engine for gene expression that integrates thousands of manually curated public microarray and RNAseq experiments and nicely visualizes gene expression across different biological contexts (diseases, drugs, tissues, cancers, genotypes, etc.). There are two basic analysis approaches: # for a gene of interest, identify which conditions affect its expression. # for condition(s) of interest, identify which genes are specifically expressed in this/these conditions. Genevestigator builds on the deep integration of data, both at the level of data normalization and on the level of sample annotations. This deep integration allows scientists to ask new types of questions that cannot be addressed using conventional tools.
Proper citation: Genevestigator (RRID:SCR_002358) Copy
Database of biological collections in natural history museums, herbaria, and other biorepositories resulting from a merger of Index Herbariorum (IH), Biodiversity Collections Index (BCI) and biorepositories.org. It contains more than 14,000 records for biorepository institutions, their collections, and staff members. Their two main goals are to improve access to information about biorepositories, the collections and specimens they house, and the researchers and collection managers who work there; and to facilitate electronic linkages to this information through web services that will rely on unique identifiers assigned to biorepositories and collections. The Consortium for the Barcode of Life (CBOL) has developed and will manage GRBio in collaboration with IH and BCI and in consultation with GBIF and NCBI. GRBio includes four categories of data records that provide information on: * Institutional repositories such as museums, herbaria, botanical gardens, zoos, biomedical research institutes and culture centers; * Institutional collection records such as the bird, algal or insect collections within an institutional repository; * Personal collections such as field samples held by a researcher before they have been accessioned into an institutional collection, or privately owned specimens held by non-researchers; and * Staff members at institutional repositories GRBio operates as a moderated community-curated resource. The community is invited to check and update their records and to register institutions, collections and staff members that have not already been registered. GRBio offers registration of institutional collections, "personal" research collections that have not yet been accessioned into an institutional repository, and privately owned collections.
Proper citation: GRBio (RRID:SCR_002228) Copy
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