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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.biobase-international.com
THIS RESOURCE IS OUT OF SERVICE, documented on February 1st,2022. BIOBASE offers academic and non-profit organizations free access to TRANSFAC?? non-professional version with much reduced functionality and content compared to our professional database.
Proper citation: BIOBASE Corporation (RRID:SCR_010271) Copy
Group headed by Professor David Jones, and was originally founded as the Joint Research Council funded Bioinformatics Unit within the Department of Computer Science at University College London. Supports the following tools: Protein Structure Prediction Threading (THREADER) Ab initio folding simulations Secondary structure prediction (PSIPRED) Protein disorder prediction (DISOPRED) Protein domain prediction (DomPred) Database of protein disorder (DisoDB) Protein Sequence Analysis Protein function prediction (ffpred) Metsite: Metal binding residue prediction HSPred : Protein-protein interaction characterisation Amino acid substitution matrices Hidden Markov Models (collaboration with N. Goldman, Cambridge, & J. Thorne, NCSU) Genome Analysis Genomic fold recognition (GenTHREADER) Genome annotation using software agents Protein Structure Classification CATH (collaboration with J. Thornton & C. Orengo, UCL Biochemistry) Transmembrane Protein Modelling MEMSAT & MEMSATSVM Folding In Lipid Membranes (FILM) MEMPACK Biological Applications of Data-mining and Machine Learning Techniques Information extraction for biological research (BioRat) Microarray Analysis Data integration for microarray analysis Data visualization Systems Biology Systems biology applied to stem cells Legacy Services (to be retired shortly) Comparison of structure classifications (CATH/SCOP/FSSP) Genomic Threading Database (GTD)
Proper citation: UCL Bioinformatics Group (RRID:SCR_010248) Copy
Repository for EEG data. The International Epilepsy Electrophysiology Portal is a collaborative initiative funded by the National Institutes of Neurological Disease and Stroke. This initiative seeks to advance research towards the understanding of epilepsy by providing a platform for sharing data, tools and expertise between researchers. The portal includes a large database of scientific data and tools to analyze these datasets.
Proper citation: ieeg.org (RRID:SCR_010000) Copy
Resource for experimentally validated human and mouse noncoding fragments with gene enhancer activity as assessed in transgenic mice. Most of these noncoding elements were selected for testing based on their extreme conservation in other vertebrates or epigenomic evidence (ChIP-Seq) of putative enhancer marks. Central public database of experimentally validated human and mouse noncoding fragments with gene enhancer activity as assessed in transgenic mice. Users can retrieve elements near single genes of interest, search for enhancers that target reporter gene expression to particular tissue, or download entire collections of enhancers with defined tissue specificity or conservation depth.
Proper citation: VISTA Enhancer Browser (RRID:SCR_007973) Copy
Central repository for high quality frequently updated manual annotation of vertebrate finished genome sequence. Human, mouse and zebrafish are in the process of being completely annotated, whereas for other species the annotation is only of specific genomic regions of particular biological interest. The majority of the annotation is from the HAVANA group at the Welcome Trust Sanger Institute. Users can BLAST, search for specific text, export, and download data. Genomes and details of the projects for each species are available through the homepages for human mouse and zebrafish. The website is built upon code from the EnsEMBL (http://www.ensembl.org) project. Some Ensembl features are not available in Vega. From the users point of view perhaps the most significant of these is MartView. However due to their inclusion in Ensembl, Vega human and mouse data can be queried using Ensembl MartView. Vega contains annotation of the human MHC region in eight haplotypes, and the LRC region in three haplotypes. Vega also contains annotation on the Insulin Dependent Diabetes (IDD) regions on non-reference assemblies for mouse.
Proper citation: VEGA (RRID:SCR_007907) Copy
http://fmf.igh.cnrs.fr/ISSAID/infevers
Registry for Familial Mediterranean Fever (FMF) and hereditary inflammatory disorders mutations. As of 2014, it includes twenty genes including: MEFV, MVK, TNFRSF1A, NLRP3, NOD2, PSTPIP1, LPIN2 and NLRP7, and contains over 1338 sequence variants. Confidential data, simple and complex alleles are accepted. For each gene, a menu offers: 1) a tabular list of the variants that can be sorted by several parameters; 2) a gene graph providing a schematic representation of the variants along the gene; 3) statistical analysis of the data according to the phenotype, alteration type, and location of the mutation in the gene; 4) the cDNA and gDNA sequences of each gene, showing the nucleotide changes along the sequence, with a color-based code highlighting the gene domains, the first ATG, and the termination codon; and 5) a download menu making all tables and figures available for the users, which, except for the gene graphs, are all automatically generated and updated upon submission of the variants. The entire database was curated to comply with the HUGO Gene Nomenclature Committee (HGNC) and HGVS nomenclature guidelines, and wherever necessary, an informative note was provided.
Proper citation: INFEVERS (RRID:SCR_007738) Copy
The Rfam database is a collection of RNA families, each represented by multiple sequence alignments, consensus secondary structures and covariance models (CMs). The families in Rfam break down into three broad functional classes: Non-coding RNA genes, structured cis-regulatory elements and self-splicing RNAs. Typically these functional RNAs often have a conserved secondary structure which may be better preserved than the RNA sequence. The CMs used to describe each family are a slightly more complicated relative of the profile hidden Markov models (HMMs) used by Pfam. CMs can simultaneously model RNA sequence and the structure in an elegant and accurate fashion. Rfam is also available via FTP. You can find data in Rfam in various ways... * Analyze your RNA sequence for Rfam matches * View Rfam family annotation and alignments * View Rfam clan details * Query Rfam by keywords * Fetch families or sequences by NCBI taxonomy * Enter any type of accession or ID to jump to the page for a Rfam family, sequence or genome
Proper citation: Rfam (RRID:SCR_007891) Copy
http://patricbrc.vbi.vt.edu/portal/portal/patric/IncumbentBRCs?page=eric
ERIC is a resource of annotated enterobacterial genomes. Information is available and accessed through a open web portal uniting biological data and analysis tools. ERIC contains information on Escherichia, Shigella, Salmonella, Yersinia, and other microorgansims. ERIC has recently been moved over to PATRIC: The PATRIC BRC is now responsible for all bacterial species in the NIAID Category A-C Priority Pathogen lists for biodefense research, and pathogens causing emerging/reemerging infectious diseases. For ERIC users, we understand that the resource was valuable to your work. As such, we will be doing our very best to create a useful PATRIC resource to continue supporting your work. We realize that the transition will cause disruptions. However, it is a priority for us to work with established BRC users and communities to identify and prioritize our transition efforts. We have concentrated on the transfer of genomic data for this initial release. We anticipate adding new data, tools, and website features over the next several months. We look forward to working with you during the next 5 years., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.
Proper citation: ERIC (RRID:SCR_007644) Copy
Genomatix is a privately held company that offers software, databases, and services aimed at understanding gene regulation at the molecular level representing a central part of systems biology. Its multilayer integrative approach is a working implementation of systems biology principles. Genomatix combines sequence analysis, functional promoter analysis, proprietary genome annotation, promoter sequence databases, comparative genomics, scientific literature data mining, pathway databases, biological network databases, pathway analysis, network analysis, and expression profiling into working solutions and pipelines. It also enables better understanding of biological mechanisms under different conditions and stimuli in the biological context of your data. Some of Genomatix'' most valuable assets are the strong scientific background and the years of experience in research & discovery as well as in development & application of scientific software. Their firsthand knowledge of all the complexities involved in the in-silico analysis of biological data makes them a first-rate partner for all scientific projects involving the evaluation of gene regulatory mechanisms. The Genomatix team has more than a decade of scientific expertise in the successful application of computer aided analysis of gene regulatory networks, which is reflected by more than 150 peer reviewed scientific publications from Genomatix'' scientists More than 35,000 researchers in industry and academia around the world use this technology. The software available in Genomatix are: - GenomatixSuite: GenomatixSuite is our comprehensive software bundle including ElDorado, Gene2Promoter, GEMS Launcher, MatInspector and MatBase. GenomatixSuite PE also includes BiblioSphere Pathway Edition. Chromatin IP Software - RegionMiner: Fast, extensive analysis of genomic regions. - ChipInspector: Discover the real power of your microarray data. Genome Annotation Software - ElDorado: Extended Genome Annotation. - Gene2Promoter: Retrieve & analyze promoters - GPD: The Genomatix Promoter Database, which is now included with Gene2Promoter. Knowledge Mining Software - BiblioSpere : The next level of pathway/genomics analysis. - LitInspector: Literature and pathway analysis for free. Sequence Analysis Software - GEMS Launcher: Our integrated collection of sequence analysis tools. - MalInspector: Search transcription factor binding sites - MatBase: The transcription factor knowledge base. Other (no registration required) Software - DiAlign: Multiple alignment of DNA/protein sequence. - Genomatix tools: Various small tools for sequence statistics, extraction, formatting, etc.
Proper citation: Genomatix Software: Understanding Gene Regulation (RRID:SCR_008036) Copy
https://plantcyc.org/databases/aracyc/15.0
Curated species-specific database present at the Plant Metabolic Network. It has a large number of experimentally supported enzymes and metabolic pathways, but it also houses a substantial number of computationally predicted enzymes and pathways.
Proper citation: AraCyc (RRID:SCR_008109) Copy
Dialog provides critical information from the world''s most authoritative publishers, combined with the tools to search every bit of it with speed and precision. With direct operations in 27 countries, Dialog products and services are a combination of highly accurate online research tools offering access to unique and relevant databases designed to meet the specific needs of a wide range of users. Information professionals and end-users at business, professional, scientific, academic and government organizations in more than 100 countries prize Dialog services to meet their searching needs. As part of the Deep Web, which is estimated to be 500 times larger than the content accessible via Web search engines, Dialog products offer unparalleled depth and breadth of content coupled with the ability to search with precision and speed. Our collection of over 900 databases handles more than 700,000 searches and delivers over 17 million document page views per month. Searchable content on Dialog services includes articles and reports from thousands of real-time news feeds, newspapers, broadcast transcripts and trade publications, plus market research reports and analyst notes providing support for financial decision-making, as well as in-depth repositories of scientific and technical data, patents, trademarks and other intellectual property data. Additional content areas include government regulations, social sciences, food and agriculture, reference, energy and environment, chemicals, pharmaceuticals and medicine.
Proper citation: Dialog (RRID:SCR_008482) Copy
https://dogma.ccbb.utexas.edu/
Web-based annotation tool for plant chloroplasts and animal mitochondrial genomes. DOGMA allows the use of BLAST searches against a custom database, and conservation of basepairing in the secondary structure of animal mitochondrial tRNAs to identify and annotate genes.
Proper citation: DOGMA (RRID:SCR_015060) Copy
Genebank of wild relatives, monogenic mutants and miscellaneous genetic stocks of tomato. TGRC offers seed samples for free to researchers worldwide.
Proper citation: C.M. Rick Tomato Genetic Resources Center (RRID:SCR_014954) Copy
Cross-platform visualization software system for 3D computer graphics, image processing, and data visualization. Various visualization algorithms and advanced modeling techniques are supported within VTK, as well as parallel processing and interoperability with select databases.
Proper citation: VTK (RRID:SCR_015013) Copy
ToppGene Suite is a one-stop portal for gene list enrichment analysis and candidate gene prioritization based on functional annotations and protein interactions network. ToppGene Suite is a one-stop portal for (i) gene list functional enrichment, (ii) candidate gene prioritization using either functional annotations or network analysis and (iii) identification and prioritization of novel disease candidate genes in the interactome. Functional annotation-based disease candidate gene prioritization uses a fuzzy-based similarity measure to compute the similarity between any two genes based on semantic annotations. The similarity scores from individual features are combined into an overall score using statistical meta-analysis.
Proper citation: ToppGene Suite (RRID:SCR_005726) Copy
UTRdb/UTRsite is a portal to other databases, including Nucleotide Sequence Databases, Protein Sequence Databases, other Sequence databanks, Untranslated Nucleotide Sequence Databases, Mitochondrial Databases, Mutation Databases, and others. The site also allows users to start long-term permanent projects or just to do quick searches, depending on the user''s needs.
Proper citation: UTRdb/UTRsite (RRID:SCR_005868) Copy
Bioinformatics Resource Center for invertebrate vectors. Provides web-based resources to scientific community conducting basic and applied research on organisms considered potential agents of biowarfare or bioterrorism or causing emerging or re-emerging diseases.
Proper citation: VectorBase (RRID:SCR_005917) Copy
http://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/MetaQC/
Software for quality control and diagnosis for microarray meta-analysis. Quantitative quality control measures include: (1) internal homogeneity of co-expression structure among studies (internal quality control; IQC); (2) external consistency of co-expression structure correlating with pathway database (external quality control; EQC); (3) accuracy of differentially expressed gene detection (accuracy quality control; AQCg) or pathway identification (AQCp); (4) consistency of differential expression ranking in genes (consistency quality control; CQCg) or pathways (CQCp). For each quality control index, the p-values from statistical hypothesis testing are minus log transformed and PCA biplots were applied to assist visualization and decision. Results generate systematic suggestions to exclude problematic studies in microarray meta-analysis and potentially can be extended to GWAS or other types of genomic meta-analysis. The identified problematic studies can be scrutinized to identify technical and biological causes (e.g. sample size, platform, tissue collection, preprocessing etc) of their bad quality or irreproducibility for final inclusion / exclusion decision.
Proper citation: MetaQC (RRID:SCR_006000) Copy
FungiDB is a database for functional and evolutionary comparison of fungal genomes. FungiDB is a functional genomic resource for pan-fungal genomes that was developed in partnership with the Eukaryotic Pathogen Bioinformatic resource center (http://EuPathDB.org). FungiDB uses the same infrastructure and user interface as EuPathDB, which allows for sophisticated and integrated searches to be performed using an intuitive graphical system. The current release of FungiDB contains genome sequence and annotation from 18 species spanning several fungal classes, including the Ascomycota classes, Eurotiomycetes, Sordariomycetes, Saccharomycetes and the Basidiomycota orders, Pucciniomycetes and Tremellomycetes, and the basal "Zygomycete" lineage Mucormycotina. Additionally, FungiDB contains cell cycle microarray data, hyphal growth RNA-sequence data and yeast two hybrid interaction data. The underlying genomic sequence and annotation combined with functional data, additional data from the FungiDB standard analysis pipeline and the ability to leverage orthology provides a powerful resource for in silico experimentation.
Proper citation: FungiDB (RRID:SCR_006013) Copy
http://equilibrator.weizmann.ac.il/
Web interface designed for thermodynamic analysis of biochemical systems. eQuilibrator enables free-text search for biochemical compounds and reactions and provides thermodynamic estimates for both in a variety of conditions. It can provide estimates for compounds in the KEGG database, and individual compounds and enzymes can be searched for by their common names (water, glucosamine, hexokinase). Reactions can be entered in a free-text format that eQuilibrator parses automatically. eQuilibrator also allows manipulation of the conditions of a reaction - pH, ionic strength, and reactant and product concentrations.
Proper citation: eQuilibrator (RRID:SCR_006011) Copy
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