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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.type2diabetesgenetics.org/
Portal and database of DNA sequence, functional and epigenomic information, and clinical data from studies on type 2 diabetes and analytic tools to analyze these data. .Provides data and tools to promote understanding and treatment of type 2 diabetes and its complications. Used for identifying genetic biomarkers correlated to Type 2 diabetes and development of novel drugs for this disease.
Proper citation: Accelerating Medicines Partnership Type 2 Diabetes Knowledge Portal (AMP-T2D) (RRID:SCR_003743) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented August 22, 2016. A database of candidate genes for mapped inherited human diseases. Candidate priorities are automatically established by a data mining algorithm that extracts putative genes in the chromosomal region where the disease is mapped, and evaluates their possible relation to the disease based on the phenotype of the disorder. Data analysis uses a scoring system developed for the possible functional relations of human genes to genetically inherited diseases that have been mapped onto chromosomal regions without assignment of a particular gene. Methodology can be divided in two parts: the association of genes to phenotypic features, and the identification of candidate genes on a chromosonal region by homology. This is an analysis of relations between phenotypic features and chemical objects, and from chemical objects to protein function terms, based on the whole MEDLINE and RefSeq databases.
Proper citation: Candidate Genes to Inherited Diseases (RRID:SCR_008190) Copy
http://www.anim.med.kyoto-u.ac.jp/nbr/default.aspx
NBRP-Rat was established to overcome limitations associated with properly utilizing existing rat resources. The collection of existing strains and genetic sub strains, phenotypic and genotypic characterization, cryopreservation of embryos, distribution of the collected rat strains, and a publicly accessible database of all assembled data are the major goals of this project. Once achieved, this unique database including the unique rat strains will become a powerful tool for biomedical research. A catalog of comparable, standardized and well characterized rat strains will lead to new and more precise research topics as well as it will facilitate biomedical sciences, drug discovery, advanced chemical research, and contributes to life sciences worldwide. As mentioned before, the major goals of NBRP-Rat are the collection, preservation and supply of rat strains. The repository includes strains from Japan and abroad, spontaneous mutants, congenic and recombinant strains as well as transgenic and mutagenized rats. Deposited rat strains are not only conserved as cryopreserved embryos and sperm. Many reference and frequently used rat strains are also maintained as living animals under SPF conditions. Furthermore, NBRP-rat provides a unique database on various rat strain phenotypes accompanied with basic genetic information. This allows scientists the selection of standardized and research specific strains. The animals themselves are provided free of charge to the research community (except for shipping costs). Sponsors: This project is one part of the National BioResource Projects (NBRP) in Japan for more than 20 species including animals, plants, microbes, tissues and DNAs. It is founded by the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (Monkasho) and started in 2002.
Proper citation: National Bio Resource Project for the Rat. (RRID:SCR_012774) Copy
http://www.seattle.eric.research.va.gov/VETR/Home.asp
The Vietnam Era Twin (VET) Registry is a closed cohort composed of approximately 7,000 middle-aged male-male twin pairs both of whom served in the military during the time of the Vietnam conflict (1964-1975). The Registry is a United States Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) resource that was originally constructed from military records; the Registry has been in existence for almost 20 years. It is one of the largest national twin registries in the US and currently has members living in all 50 states. Initially formed to address questions about the long-term health effects of service in Vietnam, the Registry has evolved into a resource for genetic epidemiological studies of mental and physical health conditions. Several waves of mail and telephone surveys have collected a wealth of health-related information on Registry twins, referred to as members. In addition to twins, selected adult offspring of twins and the mothers of those offspring are also VET Registry members. More recent data collection efforts have focused on specific sets of twin pairs and have conducted detailed clinical or laboratory testing. Selected Vietnam Era Registry Research Studies: * Veteran Health Study * VETSA 2: A Longitudinal Study of Cognitive Aging * Alcoholism Course thought Midlife: A Twin Family Study and Offspring of Twins: G, E and GxE Risk for Alcoholism * GE: Offspring of Twins with Substance Use Disorder * Mechanisms Linking Depression to Cardiovascular Risk (Twins Heart Study 2) * Post-traumatic Stress Disorder and Cardiovascular Disease * Biological Markers for Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (T3) * Memory and the Hippocampus in Vietnam-era Twins with PTSD (Time 3)
Proper citation: Vietnam Era Twin Registry (RRID:SCR_008807) Copy
http://wpicr.wpic.pitt.edu/WPICCompGen/hclust/hclust.htm
Software application that is a simple clustering method that can be used to rapidly identify a set of tag SNP's based upon genotype data (entry from Genetic Analysis Software), THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.
Proper citation: HCLUST (RRID:SCR_009154) Copy
http://www.cdc.gov/genomics/hugenet/default.htm
Human Genome Epidemiology Network, or HuGENet, is a global collaboration of individuals and organizations committed to the assessment of the impact of human genome variation on population health and how genetic information can be used to improve health and prevent disease. Its goals include: establishing an information exchange that promotes global collaboration in developing peer-reviewed information on the relationship between human genomic variation and health and on the quality of genetic tests for screening and prevention; providing training and technical assistance to researchers and practitioners interested in assessing the role of human genomic variation on population health and how such information can be used in practice; developing an updated and accessible knowledge base on the World Wide Web; and promoting the use of this knowledge base by health care providers, researchers, industry, government, and the public for making decisions involving the use of genetic information for disease prevention and health promotion. HuGENet collaborators come from multiple disciplines such as epidemiology, genetics, clinical medicine, policy, public health, education, and biomedical sciences. Currently, there are 4 HuGENet Coordinating Centers for the implementation of HuGENet activities: CDC''s Office of Public Health Genomics, Atlanta, Georgia; HuGENet UK Coordinating Center, Cambridge, UK; University of Ioannina, Greece; University of Ottawa , Ottawa, Canada. HuGENet includes: HuGE e-Journal Club: The HuGE e-Journal Club is an electronic discussion forum where new human genome epidemiologic (HuGE) findings, published in the scientific literature in the CDC''s Office of Public Health Genomics Weekly Update, will be abstracted, summarized, presented, and discussed via a newly created HuGENet listserv. HuGE Reviews: A HuGE Review identifies human genetic variations at one or more loci, and describes what is known about the frequency of these variants in different populations, identifies diseases that these variants are associated with and summarizes the magnitude of risks and associated risk factors, and evaluates associated genetic tests. Reviews point to gaps in existing epidemiologic and clinical knowledge, thus stimulating further research in these areas. HuGE Fact Sheets: HuGE Fact Sheets summarize information about a particular gene, its variants, and associated diseases. HuGE Case Studies: An on-line presentation designed to sharpen your epidemiological skills and enhance your knowledge on genomic variation and human diseases. Its purpose is to train health professionals in the practical application of human genome epidemiology (HuGE), which translates gene discoveries to disease prevention by integrating population-based data on gene-disease relationships and interventions. Students will acquire conceptual and practical tools for critically evaluating the growing scientific literature in specific disease areas. HUGENet Publications: Articles related to the HuGENet movement written by our HuGENet collaborators. HuGE Navigator: An integrated, searchable knowledge base of genetic associations and human genome epidemiology, including information on population prevalence of genetic variants, gene-disease associations, gene-gene and gene- environment interactions, and evaluation of genetic tests. HuGE Workshops: HuGENet has sponsored meetings and workshops with national and international partners since 2001. Available are detailed summaries, agendas or the ability to download speaker slides. HuGE Book: Human Genome Epidemiology: A Scientific Foundation for Using Genetic Information to Improve Health and Prevent Disease. (The findings and conclusions in this book are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the views of the funding agency.) HuGENet Collaborators: HuGENet is interested in establishing collaborations with individuals and organizations working on population based research involving genetic information. HuGE Funding: Funding opportunities for specific population-based genetic epidemiology research projects are available. Research initiatives whose aims include assessing the prevalence of human genetic variation, the association between genetic variants and human diseases, the measurement of gene-gene or gene-environment interaction, and the evaluation of genetic tests for screening and prevention are compiled to create a posted listing. Additional information and application details can be found by clicking on the respective links.
Proper citation: Human Genome Epidemiology Network (RRID:SCR_013117) Copy
Software package for advanced Bayesian evolutionary analysis by sampling trees. Used for phylogenetics, population genetics and phylodynamics. Program for Bayesian phylogenetic analysis of molecular sequences. Estimates rooted, time measured phylogenies using strict or relaxed molecular clock models. Framework can be extended by third parties. Comprised of standalone programs including BEAUti, BEAST, MASTER, RBS, SNAPP, MultiTypeTree, BDSKY, LogAnalyser, LogCombiner, TreeAnnotator, DensiTree and package manager.
Proper citation: BEAST2 (RRID:SCR_017307) Copy
Portal for identifying genetic and pharmacologic dependencies and biomarkers that predicts them by providing access to datasets, visualizations, and analysis tools that are being used by Cancer Dependency Map Project at Broad Institute. Project to systematically identify genes and small molecule dependencies and to determine markers that predict sensitivity. All data generated by DepMap Project are available to public under CC BY 4.0 license on quarterly basis and pre-publication.
Proper citation: Cancer Dependency Map Portal (RRID:SCR_017655) Copy
https://deepblue.mpi-inf.mpg.de/
Central data access hub for large collections of epigenomic data. It organizes data from different sources using controlled vocabularies and ontologies. Data Server for storing, organizing, searching, and retrieving genomic and epigenomic data, handling associated metadata, and to perform different types of analysis.
Proper citation: Deep Blue Epigenomic Data Server (RRID:SCR_017490) Copy
http://taylor0.biology.ucla.edu/structureHarvester/
Web based program for collating results generated by program STRUCTURE. Provides assess and visualize likelihood values across multiple values of K and hundreds of iterations for easier detection of number of genetic groups that best fit data. Reformats data for use in downstream programs, such as CLUMPP.It is complement for using software Structure in genetics population. Website and program for visualizing STRUCTURE output and implementing Evanno method., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.
Proper citation: Structure Harvester (RRID:SCR_017636) Copy
http://chemrich.fiehnlab.ucdavis.edu/
Software tool for chemical similarity enrichment analysis of metabolomics datasets. Used in studies to uncover biological mechanisms in organisms under genetic or environmental stress in system biology manner or finding risk factors for chronic diseases in exposome wise association studies using blood specimens. Allows users to realize pathway analysis.
Proper citation: ChemRICH (RRID:SCR_017609) Copy
http://upr.eagle-i.net/i/0000012c-9dd1-fddf-95a5-371e80000000
Core facility that provides the following services: Necropsy. The Sabana Seca Field Station (SSFS) is the administrative headquarters for the Caribbean Primate Research Center, or CPRC. This area contains offices, a clinic, and laboratories for reproductive biology and bone densitometry, necropsy and maintenance buildings. It houses rhesus monkeys from the CS colony or from the CS genetic line.
Proper citation: UPR Sabana Seca Field Station Caribbean Primate Research Center (RRID:SCR_010134) Copy
http://fcon_1000.projects.nitrc.org/indi/enhanced/
Dataset of 1000 characterized community-ascertained participants using state-of-the-art multiband imaging-based resting state fMRI (R-fMRI) and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), genetics, and a deep phenotyping protocol from a large cross-sectional sample of brain development, maturation and aging (ages 6 - 85 yrs). The Center for Magnetic Resonance Research (CMRR), University of Minnesota, provided the NKI-RS effort with the latest version of the Multiband EPI sequence (Xu et al. 2012) and associated image reconstruction algorithms, enabling the acquisition of state-of-the-art imaging datasets for this large-scale imaging effort. The enhanced NKI-RS expands upon the phenotypic protocol of the original NKI-RS and captures a broad range of behavioral and cognitive phenomenology relevant to psychiatric health and illness. The validity and value of assessments were evaluated by consulting leaders in the field of psychiatric phenotyping.
Proper citation: NKI-RS Enhanced Sample (RRID:SCR_010461) Copy
http://csbio.unc.edu/CCstatus/index.py?run=Geneseek
MUGA genotypes for 458 samples from the developing CC lines described in the February 2012 issue of Genetics. Genotypes for 168 reference strains that include biological and technical replicates for the the 8 CC founder strains and their F1 crosses are also provided. Genotype calls are those reported by Illumina. All results are provided as comma separated files with one row per marker. Each marker is identified by a probe name and its genomic position in NCBI Build 37.
Proper citation: MUGA (RRID:SCR_014072) Copy
http://wiringthebrain.blogspot.com/
This blog highlights and comments on current research and hypotheses relating to how the brain wires itself up during development, how the end result can vary in different people and what happens when it goes wrong. It includes discussions of the genetic and neurodevelopmental bases of traits such as intelligence and personality characteristics, as well as of conditions such as schizophrenia, autism, dyslexia, epilepsy, synaesthesia and others.
Proper citation: Wiring the Brain (RRID:SCR_005528) Copy
https://github.com/chr1swallace/coloc
Software package to perform genetic colocalisation analysis of two potentially related phenotypes, to ask whether they share common genetic causal variant(s) in a given region.Colocalisation Tests of Two Genetic Traits.
Proper citation: coloc (RRID:SCR_026041) Copy
Full service viral vector production core that provides investigators access to vector technology for preclinical studies and other basic research applications. Staff will provide expert consultation services for advanced study design, safe use of viral vector technologies and viral construction services for multiple viral vector types.
Proper citation: Columbia University Zuckerman Institute Molecular Tools Core Facility (RRID:SCR_026201) Copy
http://www.omicsexpress.com/sva.php
Software package to annotate, visualize, and analyze the genetic variants identified through next-generation sequencing studies, including whole-genome sequencing (WGS) and exome sequencing studies. SVA aims to provide the research community with a user-friendly and efficient tool to analyze large amount of genetic variants, and to facilitate the identification of the genetic causes of human diseases and related traits.
Proper citation: SVA (RRID:SCR_002155) Copy
https://www.sfari.org/funding-opportunities/
The mission of SFARI is to improve the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of autism and related developmental disorders. SFARI explores neuroscience from multiple directions, including molecular, cellular, systems, immunological, cognitive, behavioral, genetic, theoretical and computational perspectives. Funding for innovative scientific research is available through a peer-reviewed proposal process at regular intervals. Research projects are reviewed by a scientific advisory board and managed by the scientific director and a highly qualified staff. Proposals in multiple research areas are sought, to reflect the complex nature of autism. The Foundation supports innovative scientific projects where our involvement will play an essential role. In the course of this support, The Foundation is interested in partnering with other entities, or providing matching support where appropriate. The Simons Foundation has historically accepted only solicited grant proposals. These grant decisions are made by the Trustees of The Simons Foundation, who review applications on an ongoing basis. In the area of autism research, requests for proposals are issued on an annual basis. The Simons Foundation does not give grants to individuals, except through their institutions.
Proper citation: Simons Foundation Autism Research Initiative: Grant Resource (RRID:SCR_001862) Copy
https://cellmodelpassports.sanger.ac.uk/
Hub for clinical, genetic and functional datasets of preclinical cancer models.Provides details of cell model relationships, patient and clinical information, as well as access to associated genetic and functional datasets. Passports database contains curated details and standardized annotation for cell models, including cancer organoid cultures. Users can navigate database via tissue, cancer-type, genetic feature and data availability to select model. REST-API provides programmatic data access and exploration.
Proper citation: Cell Model Passports (RRID:SCR_027682) Copy
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