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https://github.com/stamatak/standard-RAxML
Software program for phylogenetic analyses of large datasets under maximum likelihood.
Proper citation: RAxML (RRID:SCR_006086) Copy
http://ogeedb.embl.de/#summary
Online GEne Essentiality database containing genes that were tested experimentally for essentiality and their features; it also provides a set of tools to systematically explore and analyze these data. The main purpose of this project is to better understand gene essentiality by facilitating the comparisons of the differences and similarities between essential and non-essential genes. This is achieved by collecting not only experimentally tested essential and non-essential genes, but also associated gene features such as expression profiles, duplication status, conservation across species, evolutionary origins and involvement in embryonic development. We focus on large-scale experiments and complement our data with text-mining results. Genes are organized into data sets according to their sources. Genes with variable essentiality status across data sets are tagged as conditionally essential, highlighting the complex interplay between gene functions and environments. Linked tools allow the user to compare gene essentiality among different gene groups, or compare features of essential genes to non-essential genes, and visualize the results. Why is it different from existing databases? * we included both essential and non-essential genes so that we could better understand the gene essentiality by comparing the similarities and differences between the two gene sets; * we compiled a list of features for each gene, including whether they are duplicates or involved in development, the number of other homologous genes in the same genome, as well as their earliest expression stages during development. These features are keys to understand the essentiality of genes; * we also provide a set of tools to explore our data and visualize the results. For example, users can simply divide genes into two groups according to whether they are duplicates, calculate the proportion of essential genes (PE%) in each group and then visualize the results in a bar plot; or they can classify genes into multiple groups according to their earliest expression stages during evolution, compare the essentiality of genes that were expressed earlier with those were latter, and plot the results in a line chart.
Proper citation: OGEE - Online GEne Essentiality database (RRID:SCR_006080) Copy
http://athina.biol.uoa.gr/bioinformatics/PRED-GPCR/
A prediction tool for GPCR Family Classification from sequence alone based on a probabilistic method that uses family-specific profile Hidden Markov Models. The PRED-GPCR system is based on a probabilistic method that uses family specific profile HMMs in order to determine to which GPCR family a query sequence belongs or resembles. The approach proposed in this method exploits the descriptive power of profile HMMs along with an exhaustive discrimination assessment method to select only highly selective and sensitive profiles, for each family. The collection of these profiles constitutes a signature library, which is scanned, for significant matches with a given query sequence. The output report for a query sequence consists of two sections: * A ranked list of the profile HMM matches, below the selected individual motif E-value cutoff, along with their corresponding family. * A ranked list of the Combined P-values, E-values as well as the number of profiles matched for each family. To cross-evaluate your results you can browse through Swiss-Prot, Trembl, Pfam and Prosite family related entries.
Proper citation: PRED-GPCR (RRID:SCR_006196) Copy
http://db-mml.sjtu.edu.cn/ICEberg/
ICEberg is an integrated database that provides comprehensive information about integrative and conjugative elements (ICEs) found in bacteria. ICEs are conjugative self-transmissible elements that can integrate into and excise from a host chromosome. An ICE contains three typical modules, integration and excision, conjugation, and regulation modules, that collectively promote vertical inheritance and periodic lateral gene flow. Many ICEs carry likely virulence determinants, antibiotic-resistant factors and/or genes coding for other beneficial traits. ICEberg offers a unique, highly organized, readily explorable archive of both predicted and experimentally supported ICE-relevant data. It currently contains details of 428 ICEs found in representatives of 124 bacterial species, and a collection of >400 directly related references. A broad range of similarity search, sequence alignment, genome context browser, phylogenetic and other functional analysis tools are readily accessible via ICEberg. ICEberg will facilitate efficient, multidisciplinary and innovative exploration of bacterial ICEs and be of particular interest to researchers in the broad fields of prokaryotic evolution, pathogenesis, biotechnology and metabolism. The ICEberg database will be maintained, updated and improved regularly to ensure its ongoing maximum utility to the research community.
Proper citation: ICEberg (RRID:SCR_006026) Copy
http://research-pub.gene.com/gmap/
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented August 29, 2016. A software program for mapping and aligning cDNA sequences to a genome. The program maps and aligns a single sequence with minimal startup time and memory requirements, and provides fast batch processing of large sequence sets. The program generates accurate gene structures, even in the presence of substantial polymorphisms and sequence errors, without using probabilistic splice site models. Methodology underlying the program includes a minimal sampling strategy for genomic mapping, oligomer chaining for approximate alignment, sandwich DP for splice site detection, and microexon identification with statistical significance testing.
Proper citation: GMAP (RRID:SCR_008992) Copy
http://www.cbs.dtu.dk/services/NetOGlyc/
Server that produces predictions of mucin-type GalNAc O-glycosylation sites in mammalian proteins.
Proper citation: NetOGlyc (RRID:SCR_009026) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on February 23,2023. Software toolbox for rigid and nonrigid registration of images. elastix is open source software, based on the well-known Insight Segmentation and Registration Toolkit (ITK). The software consists of a collection of algorithms that are commonly used to solve (medical) image registration problems. The modular design of elastix allows the user to quickly configure, test, and compare different registration methods for a specific application. A command-line interface enables automated processing of large numbers of data sets, by means of scripting. A paper describing elastix contains more details: S. Klein, M. Staring, K. Murphy, M.A. Viergever, J.P.W. Pluim, elastix: a toolbox for intensity based medical image registration,; IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging, vol. 29, no. 1, pp. 196 - 205, January 2010., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.
Proper citation: elastix (RRID:SCR_009619) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/IMGT-ONTOLOGY
Ontology for immunogenetics and immunoinformatics. Provides semantic specification of terms to be used in immunogenetics and immunoinformatics and manages related knowledge, thus allowing standardization for immunogenetics data from genome, proteome, genetics, two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) structures. Manages the knowledge through diverse facets relying on seven axioms, IDENTIFICATION, CLASSIFICATION, DESCRIPTION, NUMEROTATION, LOCALIZATION, ORIENTATION and OBTENTION. These axioms postulate that any object, any process and any relation can be identified, classified, described, numbered, localized and orientated, and the way it is obtained can be characterized. The axioms constitute the Formal IMGT-ONTOLOGY, also designated as IMGT-Kaleidoscope. As the same axioms can be used to generate concepts for multi-scale level approaches, the Formal IMGT-ONTOLOGY represents a paradigm for system biology ontologies, which need to identify, to classify, to describe, to number, to localize and to orientate objects, processes and relations at the molecule, cell, tissue, organ, organism or population levels. IMGT, the international ImMunoGeneTics information system, has been built on IMGT-ONTOLOGY. The version 1.0.2 of IMGT-ONTOLOGY includes the concepts of IDENTIFICATION and the concepts of CLASSIFICATION.
Proper citation: IMGT-ONTOLOGY (RRID:SCR_010342) Copy
EVEX is a text mining resource built on top of PubMed abstracts and PubMed Central full texts. It contains over 40 million bio-molecular events among more than 76 million automatically extracted gene/protein name mentions. The text mining data further has been enriched with gene normalization results, allowing straightforward integration with external resources. Further, gene families from Ensembl and HomoloGene provide homology-based event generalizations. EVEX presents both direct and indirect associations between genes and proteins, enabling explorative browsing of relevant literature.
Proper citation: Evex (RRID:SCR_010509) Copy
An online database for miRNA target prediction and functional annotations.
Proper citation: miRDB (RRID:SCR_010848) Copy
http://ccb.jhu.edu/software/glimmer/index.shtml
A software system for finding genes in microbial DNA, especially the genomes of bacteria, archaea, and viruses.
Proper citation: Glimmer (RRID:SCR_011931) Copy
http://mafft.cbrc.jp/alignment/server/
Software package as multiple alignment program for amino acid or nucleotide sequences. Can align up to 500 sequences or maximum file size of 1 MB. First version of MAFFT used algorithm based on progressive alignment, in which sequences were clustered with help of Fast Fourier Transform. Subsequent versions have added other algorithms and modes of operation, including options for faster alignment of large numbers of sequences, higher accuracy alignments, alignment of non-coding RNA sequences, and addition of new sequences to existing alignments.
Proper citation: MAFFT (RRID:SCR_011811) Copy
http://www.uhnresearch.ca/labs/tillier/ProDesign/ProDesign.html
Webserver that can be used to find oligonucleotide probe sets for microarray slides. The probes can be for individual sequences or for clusters of genes. This webserver accepts files up to 200 kb in size in order to minimize the running time. For larger files please download the program.
Proper citation: ProDesign (RRID:SCR_010966) Copy
http://www.g-language.org/GenomeProjector/
A searchable database browser with zoomable user interface using Google Map API. Genome Projector currently contains 4 views: Genome map, Plasmid map, Pathway map, and DNA walk.
Proper citation: Genome Projector (RRID:SCR_011790) Copy
A tool for high-performance comparative metagenomics that allows users to view, query, browse, and compare metagenomics annotation profiles from short reads or assemblies. Users can use statistical tests, hierarchical clustering, multidimensional scaling, and heat maps to compare multiple datasets at various functional and taxonomic levels.
Proper citation: METAREP (RRID:SCR_011926) 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
Software providing a data analysis pipeline for shotgun mass-spectrometry proteomics.
Proper citation: CPFP (RRID:SCR_012043) Copy
Database that provides a collection of transmembrane, monotopic and peripheral proteins from the Protein Data Bank whose spatial arrangements in the lipid bilayer have been calculated theoretically and compared with experimental data. The database allows analysis, sorting and searching of membrane proteins based on their structural classification, species, destination membrane, numbers of transmembrane segments and subunits, numbers of secondary structures and the calculated hydrophobic thickness or tilt angle with respect to the bilayer normal.
Proper citation: Orientations of Proteins in Membranes database (RRID:SCR_011961) Copy
http://srna-workbench.cmp.uea.ac.uk/tools/visualisation-tools/vissr/
Software to generate a visual representation of sRNAs and user-imported genomic features. The tool may be run on its own or from other tools, e.g. miRCat.
Proper citation: VisSR (RRID:SCR_012024) Copy
A webserver built on the Galaxy framework that enables the mining of sequence data for transcription factor binding sites. This tool suite was designed to aid in analysis of next-generation sequencing (NGS) data that uses a support vector machine (SVM) with kmer sequence features to identify predictive combinations of short transcription factor binding sites which determine the tissue specificity of the original NGS assay. While you may use datasets already available from Galaxy, you can upload your data using the ''Get Data'' Tool. The tool can upload data from a variety of locations.
Proper citation: kmer-SVM (RRID:SCR_010882) Copy
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