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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://zhanglab.ccmb.med.umich.edu/I-TASSER/
Web server as integrated platform for automated protein structure and function prediction. Used for protein 3D structure prediction. Resource for automated protein structure prediction and structure-based function annotation.
Proper citation: I-TASSER (RRID:SCR_014627) Copy
https://github.com/davidemms/OrthoFinder
Software Python application for comparative genomics analysis. Finds orthogroups and orthologs, infers rooted gene trees for all orthogroups and identifies all of gene duplcation events in those gene trees, infers rooted species tree for species being analysed and maps gene duplication events from gene trees to branches in species tree, improves orthogroup inference accuracy. Runs set of protein sequence files, one per species, in FASTA format.
Proper citation: OrthoFinder (RRID:SCR_017118) Copy
Software application as an integrated web resource of marmoset biological data. Used to find genomic, expression and alternative splicing data to facilitate the study of animal model for neuropsychiatric and social behavior research and to support biological analyses such as functional (ontology) enrichment analysis and protein-protein-network.
Proper citation: CajaDB (RRID:SCR_016506) Copy
https://github.com/tomazc/iCount
Software Python package for protein-RNA interaction analysis. Used for analysis of protein-RNA interactions with iCLIP sequencing data and RNA maps.
Proper citation: iCount (RRID:SCR_016712) Copy
https://www.ebi.ac.uk/thornton-srv/software/PROCHECK/
Software tool to check stereochemical quality of protein structures. Its outputs comprise number of plots in PostScript format and comprehensive residue by residue listing. Includes PROCHECK-NMR for checking quality of structures solved by NMR.
Proper citation: PROCHECK (RRID:SCR_019043) Copy
https://omictools.com/rnacompete-tool
Method for the systematic analysis of RNA binding specificities that uses a single binding reaction to determine the relative preferences of RBPs for short RNAs that contain a complete range of k-mers in structured and unstructured RNA contexts. RNAcompete identifies expected and previously unknown RNA binding preferences., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.
Proper citation: RNAcompete (RRID:SCR_015900) Copy
https://github.com/santeripuranen/SuperDCA
Software tool for global direct coupling analysis of input genome alignments. Implements variant of pseudolikelihood maximization direct coupling analysis, with emphasis on optimizations that enable its use on genome scale. May be used to discover co evolving pairs of loci.Used for genome wide epistasis analysis.
Proper citation: SuperDCA (RRID:SCR_018175) Copy
Database of hundreds of thousands of products submitted by reagent provider partners, and millions of webpages selected from reagent suppliers. All are organized according to genes, species, and reagent types (antibodies, recombinant proteins, ELISA, siRNA, cDNA clones, biochemicals, and others).
Proper citation: Labome (RRID:SCR_007384) Copy
http://www.ebi.ac.uk/biomodels-main/
Repository of mathematical models of biological and biomedical systems. Hosts selection of existing literature based physiologically and pharmaceutically relevant mechanistic models in standard formats. Features programmatic access via Web Services. Each model is curated to verify that it corresponds to reference publication and gives proper numerical results. Curators also annotate components of models with terms from controlled vocabularies and links to other relevant data resources allowing users to search accurately for models they need. Models can be retrieved in SBML format and import/export facilities are being developed to extend spectrum of formats supported by resource.
Proper citation: BioModels (RRID:SCR_001993) Copy
Database of genetic and molecular biological information about the filamentous fungi of the genus Aspergillus including information about genes and proteins of Aspergillus nidulans and Aspergillus fumigatus; descriptions and classifications of their biological roles, molecular functions, and subcellular localizations; gene, protein, and chromosome sequence information; tools for analysis and comparison of sequences; and links to literature information; as well as a multispecies comparative genomics browser tool (Sybil) for exploration of orthology and synteny across multiple sequenced Sgenus species. Also available are Gene Ontology (GO) and community resources. Based on the Candida Genome Database, the Aspergillus Genome Database is a resource for genomic sequence data and gene and protein information for Aspergilli. Among its many species, the genus contains an excellent model organism (A. nidulans, or its teleomorph Emericella nidulans), an important pathogen of the immunocompromised (A. fumigatus), an agriculturally important toxin producer (A. flavus), and two species used in industrial processes (A. niger and A. oryzae). Search options allow you to: *Search AspGD database using keywords. *Find chromosomal features that match specific properties or annotations. *Find AspGD web pages using keywords located on the page. *Find information on one gene from many databases. *Search for keywords related to a phenotype (e.g., conidiation), an allele (such as veA1), or an experimental condition (e.g., light). Analysis and Tools allow you to: *Find similarities between a sequence of interest and Aspergillus DNA or protein sequences. *Display and analyze an Aspergillus sequence (or other sequence) in many ways. *Navigate the chromosomes set. View nucleotide and protein sequence. *Find short DNA/protein sequence matches in Aspergillus. *Design sequencing and PCR primers for Aspergillus or other input sequences. *Display the restriction map for a Aspergillus or other input sequence. *Find similarities between a sequence of interest and fungal nucleotide or protein sequences. AspGD welcomes data submissions.
Proper citation: ASPGD (RRID:SCR_002047) Copy
http://microbes.ucsc.edu/cgi-bin/hgGateway?db=neisMeni_MC58_1
Portal contains detailed information for Neisseria meningitidis MC58. Information include DNA molecule summary, primary annotation summary, and taxonomy. It is a tool that allows the researcher to access all of the bacterial genome sequences completed to date. Users may access information on all of the bacterial genomes or any subset of them. Information in the website about its DNA molecule includes: total number of DNA molecules, total size of all DNA molecules, number of primary annotation coding bases, and number of G + C bases. Its primary annotation summary include: total genes, protein coding genes, tRNA genes, and rRNA genes. Sponsors: The CMR was previously funded by two grants, one from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and one from the National Science Foundation (NSF). It is currently partially funded by a Microbial Sequence Center (MSC) grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Proper citation: Neisseria meningitidis MC58 Genome Page (RRID:SCR_002200) Copy
http://bioafrica.mrc.ac.za/index.html
The BioAfrica HIV-1 Proteomics Resource is a website that contains detailed information about the HIV-1 proteome and protease cleavage sites, as well as data-mining tools that can be used to manipulate and query protein sequence data, a BLAST tool for initiating structural analyses of HIV-1 proteins, and a proteomics tools directory. HIV Proteomics Resource contains information about each HIV-1 gene product in regard to expression, post-transcriptional / post-translational modifications, localization, functional activities, and potential interactions with viral and host macromolecules. The Proteome section contains extensive data on each of 19 HIV-1 proteins, including their functional properties, a sample analysis of HIV-1HXB2, structural models and links to other online resources. The HIV-1 Protease Cleavage Sites section provides information on the position, subtype variation and genetic evolution of Gag, Gag-Pol and Nef cleavage sites.
Proper citation: BioAfrica HIV Informatics in Africa (RRID:SCR_002295) Copy
Complete siRNA target database, complete Peptide-Antigen target database and a Kinase-Phosphatase database. They have also developed the largest database of illustrated signal transduction pathways, which are interconnected to their extensive protein database and online gene / protein analysis tools. The interactive web-based databases and software help life-scientists understand the complexity of systems biology. Systems biology efforts focus on understanding cellular networks, protein interactions involved in cell signaling, mechanisms of cell survival and apoptosis leading to development or identification of drug candidates against a variety of diseases. In the post-genomic era, one of the major concerns for life-science researchers is the organization of gene / protein data. Protein Lounge has met this concern by organizing all necessary data about genes / proteins into one portal.
Proper citation: Protein Lounge (RRID:SCR_002117) Copy
http://ccmbweb.ccv.brown.edu/gibbs/gibbs.html
Software to identify motifs, conserved regions, in DNA or protein sequences.
Proper citation: Gibbs Motif Sampler (RRID:SCR_002550) Copy
Maintains and provides archival, retrieval and analytical resources for biological information. Central DDBJ resource consists of public, open-access nucleotide sequence databases including raw sequence reads, assembly information and functional annotation. Database content is exchanged with EBI and NCBI within the framework of the International Nucleotide Sequence Database Collaboration (INSDC). In 2011, DDBJ launched two new resources: DDBJ Omics Archive and BioProject. DOR is archival database of functional genomics data generated by microarray and highly parallel new generation sequencers. Data are exchanged between the ArrayExpress at EBI and DOR in the common MAGE-TAB format. BioProject provides organizational framework to access metadata about research projects and data from projects that are deposited into different databases.
Proper citation: DNA DataBank of Japan (DDBJ) (RRID:SCR_002359) Copy
http://funsimmat.bioinf.mpi-inf.mpg.de
FunSimMat is a comprehensive resource of semantic and functional similarity values. It allows ranking disease candidate proteins for OMIM diseases and searching for functional similarity values for proteins (extracted from UniProt), and protein families (Pfam, SMART). FunSimMat provides several different semantic and functional similarity measures for each protein pair using the Gene Ontology annotation from UniProtKB and the Gene Ontology Annotation project at EBI (GOA). There are several search options available: Disease candidate prioritization: * Rank candidate proteins using any OMIM disease entry * Compare a list of proteins to any OMIM disease entry * Compare all human proteins to any OMIM disease entry Functional similarity: * Compare one protein / protein family to a list of proteins / protein families * Compare a list of GO terms to a list of proteins / protein families Semantic similarity: * For a list of GO terms, FunSimMat performs an all-against-all comparison and displays the semantic similarity values. FunSimMat provides an XML-RPC interface for performing automatic queries and processing of the results as well as a RestLike Interface. Platform: Online tool
Proper citation: FunSimMat (RRID:SCR_002729) Copy
Database of known and predicted mammalian and eukaryotic protein-protein interactions, it is designed to be both a resource for the laboratory scientist to explore known and predicted protein-protein interactions, and to facilitate bioinformatics initiatives exploring protein interaction networks. It has been built by mapping high-throughput (HTP) data between species. Thus, until experimentally verified, these interactions should be considered predictions. It remains one of the most comprehensive sources of known and predicted eukaryotic PPI. It contains 490,600 Source Interactions, 370,002 Predicted Interactions, for a total of 846,116 interactions, and continues to expand as new protein-protein interaction data becomes available.
Proper citation: I2D (RRID:SCR_002957) Copy
http://www.humanproteinpedia.org/
A community portal for sharing and integration of human protein data that allows research laboratories to contribute and maintain protein annotations. The Human Protein Reference Database (HPRD) integrates data that is deposited along with the existing literature curated information in the context of an individual protein. Data pertaining to post-translational modifications, protein-protein interactions, tissue expression, expression in cell lines, subcellular localization and enzyme substrate relationships can be submitted.
Proper citation: Human Proteinpedia (RRID:SCR_002948) Copy
Computational biology research at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC) pursues computational biology research projects and the development of bioinformatics resources in the areas of: sequence-structure analysis; gene regulation; molecular pathways and networks, and diagnostic and prognostic indicators. The mission of cBio is to move the theoretical methods and genome-scale data resources of computational biology into everyday laboratory practice and use, and is reflected in the organization of cBio into research and service components ~ the intention being that new computational methods created through the process of scientific inquiry should be generalized and supported as open-source and shared community resources. Faculty from cBio participate in graduate training provided through the following graduate programs: * Gerstner Sloan-Kettering Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences * Graduate Training Program in Computational Biology and Medicine Integral to much of the research and service work performed by cBio is the creation and use of software tools and data resources. The tools that we have created and utilize provide evidence of our involvement in the following areas: * Cancer Genomics * Data Repositories * iPhone & iPod Touch * microRNAs * Pathways * Protein Function * Text Analysis * Transcription Profiling
Proper citation: Computational Biology Center (RRID:SCR_002877) Copy
http://bibiserv.techfak.uni-bielefeld.de/dialign/
Tool for multiple sequence alignment using various sources of external information that is particularly useful to detect local homologies in sequences with low overall similarity. While standard alignment methods rely on comparing single residues and imposing gap penalties, DIALIGN constructs pairwise and multiple alignments by comparing entire segments of the sequences. No gap penalty is used. This approach can be used for both global and local alignment, but it is particularly successful in situations where sequences share only local homologies. Several versions of DIALIGN are available online at GOBICS, http://dialign.gobics.de/
Proper citation: DIALIGN (RRID:SCR_003041) Copy
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