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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.
| Resource Name | Proper Citation | Abbreviations | Resource Type |
Description |
Keywords | Resource Relationships | |||||||||||||
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ASPGD Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
ASPGD (RRID:SCR_002047) | ASPGD, ASPGD LOCUS, ASPGD REF | database, service resource, storage service resource, data repository, data or information resource | 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. | function, gene, gene name, annotation, aspergillus, aspergillus nidulans, chromosome, community, dna, genome, genomic, localization, orthology, phenotype, protein, protein-coding genes, s. cerevisiae, sequence, allele, data analysis service, bio.tools, FASEB list |
is used by: NIF Data Federation is listed by: bio.tools is listed by: Debian is related to: Candida Genome Database is related to: AmiGO has parent organization: Stanford University School of Medicine; California; USA has parent organization: Broad Institute |
NIAID R01 AI077599 | PMID:19773420 | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-12244, biotools:aspgd | http://www.aspergillusgenome.org/ https://bio.tools/aspgd |
SCR_002047 | Aspergillus Genome Database, ASPGD REF, ASPGD LOCUS | 2026-02-15 09:18:14 | 212 | ||||
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Stanford Genomics Service Center Core Facility Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Stanford Genomics Service Center Core Facility (RRID:SCR_002050) | SFGF, | access service resource, core facility, service resource | Stanford Genomics formerly Stanford Functional Genomics Facility provides services for high throughput sequencing, single cell assays, gene expression and genotyping studies utilizing microarray and real time PCR, and related services. High throughput sequencing (Illumina HiSeq 4000, NextSeq 500, MiSeq and MiniSeq), microarray gene expression and genotyping services (Affymetrix, Agilent and Illumina). Provides 24/7 access to instruments, equipment and software utilized within genomics field. | ABRF, Stanford Genomics, genomics, high throughput sequencing, single cell assays, gene expression, genotyping, microarray, real time PCR, |
is listed by: ABRF CoreMarketplace has parent organization: Stanford University; Stanford; California |
NIAID ; Comprehensive Cancer Center |
Open | SCR_008627, ABRF_200, nif-0000-31997, nif-0000-12246 | https://coremarketplace.org/?FacilityID=200&citation=1 | http://www.microarray.org/sfgf/ | SCR_002050 | Stanford Medicine Stanford Functional Genomics Facility, Stanford University Functional Genomics Core Facility, Stanford Functional Genomics Facility, Stanford Genomics, Stanford Genomics Service Center, Stanford School of Medicine Stanford Functional Genomics Facility | 2026-02-15 09:18:14 | 10 | ||||
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Nonhuman Primate Transplantation Tolerance Cooperative Study Group Resource Report Resource Website |
Nonhuman Primate Transplantation Tolerance Cooperative Study Group (RRID:SCR_006847) | NHPCSG | portal, research forum portal, data or information resource, topical portal, disease-related portal, resource | Cooperative program for research on nonhuman primate models of kidney, islet, heart, and lung transplantation evaluating the safety and efficacy of existing and new treatment regimens that promote the immune system''''s acceptance of a transplant and to understand why the immune system either rejects or does not reject a transplant. This program bridges the critical gap between small-animal research and human clinical trials. The program supports research into the immunological mechanisms of tolerance induction and development of surrogate markers for the induction, maintenance, and loss of tolerance. | transplantation, clinical, kidney, islet, tolerance, heart, lung, treatment, immune system, tolerance induction | is related to: NIDDK Information Network (dkNET) | Kidney transplantation, Islet transplantation, Heart transplantation, Lung transplantation | NIDDK ; NIAID |
nlx_152728 | http://www.niddk.nih.gov/fund/diabetesspecialfunds/consortia/NHP.pdf | SCR_006847 | Non-human Primate Transplantation Tolerance Cooperative Study Group | 2026-02-15 09:19:23 | 0 | |||||
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HCV Immunology Database Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
HCV Immunology Database (RRID:SCR_007086) | HCV Immunology Database | data analysis service, database, service resource, production service resource, data or information resource, analysis service resource | The HCV Immunology Database contains a curated inventory of immunological epitopes in HCV and their interaction with the immune system, with associated retrieval and analysis tools. The funding for the HCV database project has stopped, and this website and the HCV immunology database are no longer maintained. The site will stay up, but problems will not be fixed. The database was last updated in September 2007. The HIV immunology website contains the same tools, and may be usable for non-HCV-specific analyses. For new epitope information, users of this database can try the Immuno Epitope Database (http://www.immuneepitope.org). | epitope, immune system, hepatitis c virus, hepatitis c, immunology, t cell, protein, alignment, antibody, binding site | has parent organization: HCV Databases | Hepatitis C | NIAID | PMID:16309340 | The data and some of the HCV database tools are available for download for non-commercial use. | nlx_151412 | SCR_007086 | Los Alamos Hepatitis C Immunology Database, Hepatitis C Virus Immunology Database, Hepatitis C Immunology Database | 2026-02-15 09:19:41 | 5 | ||||
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ERIC Resource Report Resource Website 500+ mentions |
ERIC (RRID:SCR_007644) | ERIC | data analysis service, database, service resource, production service resource, data or information resource, analysis service resource | 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. | enterobacteria, enterobacteria pathogen, biodefense, disease bioinformatics, human disease, pathogen, pathogenic bacteria, cronobacter, enterobacter, erwinia, klebsiella, pectobacterium, photorhabdus, proteus, serratia, escherichia, shigella, salmonella, yersinia, citrobacter, FASEB list | has parent organization: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Virginia; USA | NIAID | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-02813 | http://www.ericbrc.org | SCR_007644 | Enteropathogen Resource Integration Center (ERIC), Enteropathogen Resource Integration Center | 2026-02-15 09:19:26 | 950 | |||||
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NMPDR Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
NMPDR (RRID:SCR_007821) | NMPDR | data analysis service, database, service resource, production service resource, data or information resource, analysis service resource | The National Microbial Pathogen Data Resource provides curated annotations in an environment for comparative analysis of genomes and biological subsystems, with an emphasis on the food-borne pathogens Campylobacter, Listeria, Staphylococcus, Streptococcus, and Vibrio; as well as the STD pathogens Chlamydiaceae, Haemophilus, Mycoplasma, Neisseria, Treponema, and Ureaplasma. This edition of the NMPDR includes 47 archaeal, 725 bacterial, and 29 eukaryal genomes with 3,257,100 genetic features, of which 1,338,895 are in FIGfams curated using 616 active subsystems. ''''''Notice to NMPDR Users'''''' - The NMPDR BRC contract ended in December 2009. At that time we ceased maintenance of the NMPDR web resource and data. Bacterial data from NMPDR has been transferred to PATRIC (http://www.patricbrc.org), a new consolidated BRC for all NIAID category A-C priority pathogenic bacteria. NMPDR was a collaboration among researchers from the Computation Institute of the University of Chicago, the Fellowship for Interpretation of Genomes (FIG), Argonne National Laboratory, and the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois. | has parent organization: University of Chicago; Illinois; USA | NIAID contract HHSN266200400042C | PMID:17145713 | nif-0000-03193 | http://www.nmpdr.org | SCR_007821 | NMPDR - National Microbial Pathogen Data Resource, National Microbial Pathogen Data Resource, NMPDR BRC, NMPDR Bioinformatics Resource Center | 2026-02-15 09:19:47 | 3 | ||||||
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Induced Mutant Resource Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Induced Mutant Resource (RRID:SCR_008366) | IMR | organism supplier, material resource, biomaterial supply resource | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on June 08, 2012. The function of the IMR is to select, import, cryopreserve, maintain, and distribute these important strains of mice to the research community. To improve their value for research, the IMR also undertakes genetic development of stocks, such as transferring mutant genes or transgenes to defined genetic backgrounds and combining transgenes and/or targeted mutations to create new mouse models for research. The function of the IMR is to: * select biomedically important stocks of transgenic, chemically induced, and targeted mutant mice * import these stocks into the Jackson Laboratory by rederivation procedures that rid them of any pathogens they might carry * cryopreserve embryos from these stocks to protect them against accidental loss and genetic contamination * backcross the mutation onto an inbred strain, if necessary * distribute them to the scientific community More than 1000 mutant stocks have been accepted by the IMR from 1992 through December 2006. Current holdings include models for research on cancer; breast cancer; immunological and inflammatory diseases; neurological diseases; behavioral, cardiovascular and heart diseases; developmental, metabolic and other diseases; reporter (e.g., GFP) and recombinase (e.g., cre/loxP) strains. About eight strains a month are being added to the IMR holdings. Research is being conducted on improved methods for assisted reproduction and speed congenic production. Most of the targeted mutants arrive on a mixed 129xC57BL/6 genetic background, and as many of these as possible are backcrossed onto an inbred strain (usually C57BL/6J). In addition, new mouse models are being created by intercrossing carriers of specific transgenes and/or targeted mutations. Simple sequence length polymorphism DNA markers are being used to characterize and evaluate differences between inbred strains, substrains, and embryonic stem cell lines. | embryo, genetic, behavioral, biomedical, breast cancer, cancer, cardiovascular, chemical, cre, cryopreserved, developmental, disease, distribution, dna, gfp, heart, immunological, inflammatory, loxp, marker, metabolic, model, mouse, mutation, neurological, pathogen, polymorphism, recombinase, research, stock, targeting, transgene | has parent organization: Jackson Laboratory | March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation ; American Cancer Society ; American Heart Association ; Cystic Fibrosis Foundation ; National Multiple Sclerosis Society ; Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Association ; NIAID ; NIAMS ; Howard Hughes Medical Institute ; Department of the Army Breast Cancer Research Initiative. ; NCRR P40 RR009781 |
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-25566 | SCR_008366 | 2026-02-15 09:19:50 | 3 | |||||||
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Pathema Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Pathema (RRID:SCR_010585) | Pathema | data analysis service, database, service resource, production service resource, data or information resource, analysis service resource | Pathema is one of the eight Bioinformatics Resource Centers designed to serve as a core resource for the bio-defense and infectious disease research community. Pathema strives to support basic research and accelerate scientific progress for understanding, detecting, diagnosing and treating an established set of six target NIAID Category A-C pathogens: Category A priority pathogens; Bacillus anthracis and Clostridium botulinum, and Category B priority pathogens; Burkholderia mallei, Burkholderia pseudomallei, Clostridium perfringens and Entamoeba histolytica. Each target pathogen is represented in one of four distinct clade-specific Pathema web resources and underlying databases developed to target the specific data and analysis needs of each scientific community. All publicly available complete genome projects of phylogenetically related organisms are also represented, providing a comprehensive collection of organisms for comparative analyses. Pathema facilitates the scientific exploration of genomic and related data through its integration with web-based analysis tools, customized to obtain, display, and compute results relevant to ongoing pathogen research. Pathema serves the bio-defense and infectious disease research community by disseminating data resulting from pathogen genome sequencing projects and providing access to the results of inter-genomic comparisons for these organisms. The Pathema BRC contract ends in December 2009. At that time JCVI will cease maintenance of the Pathema web resource and data. The PATRIC team, located at the Virginia Bioinformatics Institute, created and maintains a consolidated BRC for all of the NIAID category A-C priority pathogenic bacteria. The EuPathDB team at the University of Pennsylvania will support all eukaryotic pathogens. Pathema transferred all data and software to PATRIC and EuPathDB for incorporation into their new Web-based bioinformatics resource. | bacillus anthracis, clostridium botulinum, burkholderia mallei, burkholderia pseudomallei, clostridium perfringens, entamoeba histolytica, bio.tools |
is listed by: Debian is listed by: bio.tools has parent organization: J. Craig Venter Institute |
NIAID contract HHSN266200400038C | PMID:19843611 | biotools:pathema, nlx_45829 | https://bio.tools/pathema | SCR_010585 | Pathema Genome Resource, Pathema Bioinformatics Resource Center | 2026-02-15 09:20:18 | 6 | |||||
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Macaque.org Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Macaque.org (RRID:SCR_002767) | Macaque.org | organization portal, portal, laboratory portal, research forum portal, data or information resource, topical portal, disease-related portal | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented May 10, 2017. A pilot effort that has developed a centralized, web-based biospecimen locator that presents biospecimens collected and stored at participating Arizona hospitals and biospecimen banks, which are available for acquisition and use by researchers. Researchers may use this site to browse, search and request biospecimens to use in qualified studies. The development of the ABL was guided by the Arizona Biospecimen Consortium (ABC), a consortium of hospitals and medical centers in the Phoenix area, and is now being piloted by this Consortium under the direction of ABRC. You may browse by type (cells, fluid, molecular, tissue) or disease. Common data elements decided by the ABC Standards Committee, based on data elements on the National Cancer Institute''s (NCI''s) Common Biorepository Model (CBM), are displayed. These describe the minimum set of data elements that the NCI determined were most important for a researcher to see about a biospecimen. The ABL currently does not display information on whether or not clinical data is available to accompany the biospecimens. However, a requester has the ability to solicit clinical data in the request. Once a request is approved, the biospecimen provider will contact the requester to discuss the request (and the requester''s questions) before finalizing the invoice and shipment. The ABL is available to the public to browse. In order to request biospecimens from the ABL, the researcher will be required to submit the requested required information. Upon submission of the information, shipment of the requested biospecimen(s) will be dependent on the scientific and institutional review approval. Account required. Registration is open to everyone.. Documented on June 8, 2020.Macaque genomic and proteomic resources and how they are providing important new dimensions to research using macaque models of infectious disease. The research encompasses a number of viruses that pose global threats to human health, including influenza, HIV, and SARS-associated coronavirus. By combining macaque infection models with gene expression and protein abundance profiling, they are uncovering exciting new insights into the multitude of molecular and cellular events that occur in response to virus infection. A better understanding of these events may provide the basis for innovative antiviral therapies and improvements to vaccine development strategies. | genomic, hiv, infection, proteomic, virus, simian immunodeficiency virus, influenza virus, animal model | has parent organization: University of Washington; Seattle; USA | Viral infection, Infectious disease | NCRR ; NIAID ; NHLBI ; NIDA |
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-24370 | SCR_002767 | Macaque.org | 2026-02-15 09:18:22 | 3 | |||||
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Hepatitis C Virus Database (HCVdb) Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Hepatitis C Virus Database (HCVdb) (RRID:SCR_005718) | HCVdb, | data analysis service, database, service resource, production service resource, data or information resource, analysis service resource | The Hepatitis C Virus Database (HCVdb) is a cooperative project of several groups with the mission of providing to the scientific community studying the hepatitis C virus a comprehensive battery of informational and analytical tools. The Viral Bioinformatics Resource Center (VBRC), the Immune Epitope Database and Analysis Resource (IEDB), the Broad Institute Microbial Sequencing Center (MSC), and the Los Alamos HCV Sequence Database (HCV-LANL) are combining forces to acquire and annotate data on Hepatitis C virus, and to develop and utilize new tools to facilitate the study of this group of organisms. | hepatitis c, hepatitis c virus, genome, gene, virus, ortholog comparison, ortholog | has parent organization: VBRC | Hepatitis C virus | NIAID contract HHSN266200400036C | nlx_149175 | SCR_005718 | Hepatitis C Viral Database | 2026-02-15 09:19:10 | 4 | ||||||
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VectorBase Resource Report Resource Website 500+ mentions |
VectorBase (RRID:SCR_005917) | VectorBase | database, service resource, storage service resource, data repository, data or information resource | 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. | blast, clustalw, hmmer, vector, genomics, genome, sequence, population, insecticide resistance, annotation, microarray, gene expression, anatomy, pathogen, human, transcript, transcriptome, protein, proteome, mitochondria sequence, bioinformatics resource center, pathogen, arthropoda, vector control, ontology, software, source code, mitochondrial sequence, data analysis service, image collection, FASEB list |
is recommended by: National Library of Medicine is listed by: re3data.org is related to: Clustal W2 is related to: AnoBase: An Anopheles database is related to: Hmmer has parent organization: European Bioinformatics Institute has parent organization: University of Notre Dame; Indiana; USA |
NIAID ; Evimalar network of excellence 242095; INFRAVEC 228421; European Union |
PMID:22135296 PMID:19028744 PMID:18262474 PMID:18237287 PMID:17145709 |
Restricted | nif-0000-03624, r3d100010880 | https://doi.org/10.17616/R3CK6B | SCR_005917 | VectorBase - Bioinformatics Resource for Invertebrate Vectors of Human Pathogens, VectorBase, vector base | 2026-02-15 09:19:15 | 835 | ||||
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VBRC Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
VBRC (RRID:SCR_005971) | VBRC | data analysis service, database, service resource, storage service resource, data repository, production service resource, data or information resource, analysis service resource | One of eight Bioinformatics Resource Centers nationwide providing comprehensive web-based genomics resources including a relational database and web application supporting data storage, annotation, analysis, and information exchange to support scientific research directed at viruses belonging to the Arenaviridae, Bunyaviridae, Filoviridae, Flaviviridae, Paramyxoviridae, Poxviridae, and Togaviridae families. These centers serve the scientific community and conduct basic and applied research on microorganisms selected from the NIH/NIAID Category A, B, and C priority pathogens that are regarded as possible bioterrorist threats or as emerging or re-emerging infectious diseases. The VBRC provides a variety of analytical and visualization tools to aid in the understanding of the available data, including tools for genome annotation, comparative analysis, whole genome alignments, and phylogenetic analysis. Each data release contains the complete genomic sequences for all viral pathogens and related strains that are available for species in the above-named families. In addition to sequence data, the VBRC provides a curation for each virus species, resulting in a searchable, comprehensive mini-review of gene function relating genotype to biological phenotype, with special emphasis on pathogenesis. | virus, arenaviridae, bunyaviridae, filoviridae, flaviviridae, paramyxoviridae, poxviridae, togaviridae, blast, ortholog, variation, sequence analysis, genome, gene, epidemiology, bioinformatics resource center, phenotype, pathogenesis, pathogen, annotation, genomics |
has parent organization: University of Alabama at Birmingham; Alabama; USA has parent organization: University of Victoria; British Columbia; Canada is parent organization of: Hepatitis C Virus Database (HCVdb) |
NIAID contract HHSN266200400036C | r3d100012088, nif-0000-03632 | https://doi.org/10.17616/R31M1P | SCR_005971 | Viral Bioinformatics Resource Center | 2026-02-15 09:19:07 | 18 | ||||||
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Autoimmune Lymphoproliferative Syndrome Information Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Autoimmune Lymphoproliferative Syndrome Information (RRID:SCR_006451) | NIAID ALPS | disease-related portal, topical portal, data or information resource, portal | A disease-related portal about Autoimmune Lymphoproliferative Syndrome (ALPS) including research in the following categories: Medical and Genetic Description, Database of Mutations, Database of ALPS-FAS Mutations, and Molecular Pathways. Autoimmune Lymphoproliferative Syndrome (ALPS) is a recently recognized disease in which a genetic defect in programmed cell death, or apoptosis, leads to breakdown of lymphocyte homeostasis and normal immunologic tolerance. It is an inherited disorder of the immune system that affects both children and adults. In ALPS, unusually high numbers of white blood cells called lymphocytes accumulate in the lymph nodes, liver, and spleen, which can lead to enlargement of these organs. Database of Mutations * All existing ALPS-FAS mutations (NIH Web site) * ALPS-FAS * ALPS Type Ia (most common type) ** Reported FAS (TNFRSF6) mutations causing ALPS ** Distribution of FAS (TNFRSF6) mutations ** FAS (TNFRSF6) polymorphisms * ALPS Type II | apoptosis, autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome, double negative t cell, lymphocyte, pathway, immune system, clinical trial, child, adult, mutation | Autoimmune Lymphoproliferative Syndrome | NIAID | nif-0000-02542 | http://research.nhgri.nih.gov/ALPS/ | SCR_006451 | NIAID Autoimmune Lymphoproliferative Syndrome (ALPS), NIAID Autoimmune Lymphoproliferative Syndrome, ALPSbase, Autoimmune Lymphoproliferative Syndrome (ALPS) | 2026-02-15 09:19:28 | 1 | ||||||
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Influenza Research Database (IRD) Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Influenza Research Database (IRD) (RRID:SCR_006641) | IRD | data analysis service, database, service resource, storage service resource, data repository, production service resource, data or information resource, analysis service resource | The Influenza Research Database (IRD) serves as a public repository and analysis platform for flu sequence, experiment, surveillance and related data. | avian, clinical, genomic, host, influenza, isolate, mammalian, nonhuman, phenotypic, preventive, proteomic, repository, strain, epitope, surveillance, treatment, virus, protein sequence, immune, 3d protein structure, align, blast, short peptide, flu protein, sequence variation, snp, phylogenetic tree, human, 3d spacial image, image, clinical data, clinical, genomic, proteomic, phenotype |
is recommended by: NIDDK Information Network (dkNET) is listed by: DataCite is listed by: re3data.org is listed by: FAIRsharing is related to: Los Alamos National Laboratory is related to: University of California at Davis; California; USA is related to: Sage Analytica is related to: J. Craig Venter Institute has parent organization: University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center; Texas; USA has parent organization: Los Alamos National Laboratory has parent organization: Sage Analytica |
Influenza virus, Influenza | NIAID | PMID:17965094 | Acknowledgement requested, The community can contribute to this resource | DOI:10.25504/FAIRsharing.ws7cgw, nif-0000-21222, DOI:10.35094, DOI:10.17616/R3S634, r3d100011558 | https://www.fludb.org/ https://doi.org/10.17616/R3S634 https://doi.org/10.17616/r3s634 https://doi.org/10.35094/ https://dx.doi.org/10.35094/ https://fairsharing.org/10.25504/FAIRsharing.ws7cgw https://doi.org/10.17616/R3S634 |
http://www.fludb.org/brc/home.do?decorator=influenza | SCR_006641 | , Influenza Research Database, IRD | 2026-02-15 09:19:32 | 28 | ||
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Autoimmunity Centers of Excellence Resource Report Resource Website |
Autoimmunity Centers of Excellence (RRID:SCR_006510) | ACE | portal, research forum portal, data or information resource, topical portal, disease-related portal, resource | Nine centers that conduct clinical trials and basic research on new immune-based therapies for autoimmune diseases. This program enhances interactions between scientists and clinicians in order to accelerate the translation of research findings into medical applications. By promoting better coordination and communication, and enabling limited resources to be pooled, ACEs is one of NIAID''''s primary vehicles for both expanding our knowledge and improving our ability to effectively prevent and treat autoimmune diseases. This coordinated approach incorporates key recommendations of the NIH Autoimmune Diseases Research Plan and will ensure progress in identifying new and highly effective therapies for autoimmune diseases. ACEs is advancing the search for effective treatments through: * Diverse Autoimmunity Expertise Medical researchers at ACEs include rheumatologists, neurologists, gastroenterologists, and endocrinologists who are among the elite in their respective fields. * Strong Mechanistic Foundation ACEs augment each clinical trial with extensive basic studies designed to enhance understanding of the mechanisms responsible for tolerance initiation, maintenance, or loss, including the role of cytokines, regulatory T cells, and accessory cells, to name a few. * Streamlined Patient Recruitment The cooperative nature of ACEs helps scientists recruit patients from distinct geographical areas. The rigorous clinical and basic science approach of ACEs helps maintain a high level of treatment and analysis, enabling informative comparisons between patient groups. | immune system, infection, clinical trial, clinical, basic research |
is listed by: NIDDK Information Network (dkNET) is listed by: NIDDK Research Resources |
Type 1 diabetes, Diabetes, Autoimmune disease, Systematic lupus erythematosus, Rheumatoid arthritis, Sjogren's syndrome, Multiple sclerosis, Chronic inflammatory bowel disease, Pemphigus vulgaris, Scleroderma | NIAID ; NIDDK ; NIH Office of Research on Womens Health |
nlx_152751 | SCR_006510 | 2026-02-15 09:19:17 | 0 | |||||||
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Fungal Genome Initiative Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Fungal Genome Initiative (RRID:SCR_003169) | FGI | data or information resource, data set | Produces and analyzes sequence data from fungal organisms that are important to medicine, agriculture and industry. The FGI is a partnership between the Broad Institute and the wider fungal research community, with the selection of target genomes governed by a steering committee of fungal scientists. Organisms are selected for sequencing as part of a cohesive strategy that considers the value of data from each organism, given their role in basic research, health, agriculture and industry, as well as their value in comparative genomics. | sequence, fungi, gene annotation, genome |
is listed by: 3DVC has parent organization: Broad Institute |
NHGRI ; NSF ; NIAID ; USDA |
Free, Freely available | nif-0000-30591 | SCR_003169 | 2026-02-14 02:07:29 | 18 | |||||||
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Virus Pathogen Resource (ViPR) Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
Virus Pathogen Resource (ViPR) (RRID:SCR_012983) | ViPR | software application, data visualization software, database, software resource, data processing software, service resource, storage service resource, data repository, data or information resource | Provides searchable public repository of genomic, proteomic and other research data for different strains of pathogenic viruses along with suite of tools for analyzing data. Data can be shared, aggregated, analyzed using ViPR tools, and downloaded for local analysis. ViPR is an NIAID-funded resource that support the research of viral pathogens in the NIAID Category A-C Priority Pathogen lists and those causing (re)emerging infectious diseases. It provides a dedicated gateway to SARS-CoV-2 data that integrates data from external sources (GenBank, UniProt, Immune Epitope Database, Protein Data Bank), direct submissions, analysis pipelines and expert curation, and provides a suite of bioinformatics analysis and visualization tools for virology research. | flu, gene, bioinformatic, database, diagnostic, genomic, health, human, influenza, pathogen, protein, research, strain, therapeutic, tool, vaccine, virus, visualization, FASEB list |
is recommended by: National Library of Medicine is listed by: Data and Computational Resources to Address COVID-19 is listed by: DataCite is listed by: re3data.org is listed by: FAIRsharing has parent organization: University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center; Texas; USA |
COVID-19 | NIAID | Restricted | nif-0000-25312, DOI:10.35083, DOI:10.35084, DOI:10.17616/R30P93, DOI:10.25504/FAIRsharing.2qx8n8 | http://www.viprbrc.org/ https://doi.org/10.17616/r30p93 https://doi.org/10.35083/ https://doi.org/10.35084/ https://dx.doi.org/10.35083/ https://dx.doi.org/10.35084/ https://fairsharing.org/10.25504/FAIRsharing.2qx8n8 |
SCR_012983 | Virus Pathogen Resource, ViPR | 2026-02-15 09:20:39 | 140 | ||||
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Sequencing of Candida Albicans Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Sequencing of Candida Albicans (RRID:SCR_013437) | topical portal, data or information resource, portal | The Stanford Genome Technology Center began a whole genome shotgun sequencing of strain SC5314 of Candida albicans. After reaching its original goal of 1.5X mean coverage of the haploid genome (16Mb) in summer, 1998, Stanford was awarded a supplemental grant to continue sequencing up to a coverage of 10X, performing as much assembly of the sequence as possible, using recognizable genes as nucleation points. Candida albicans is one of the most commonly encountered human pathogens, causing a wide variety of infections ranging from mucosal infections in generally healthy persons to life-threatening systemic infections in individuals with impaired immunity. Oral and esophogeal Candida infections are frequently seen in AIDS patients. Few classes of drugs are effective against these fungal infections, and all of them have limitations with regard to efficacy and side-effects. | stanford, genome, technology, shotgun, sequencing, strain, haploid, gene, nucleation, health, life, aids, drug, patient | has parent organization: Stanford University; Stanford; California | Burroughs Wellcome Fund ; NIDCR DE12302-02S2; NIAID RO1AI16567; NIAID RO1AI46351; NIAID NO1AI05406; NIDCR R01DE12940; NIDCR P01DE07946 |
nif-0000-30294 | SCR_013437 | Candida Albicans | 2026-02-15 09:20:41 | 21 | ||||||||
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PlasmoDB Resource Report Resource Website 1000+ mentions |
PlasmoDB (RRID:SCR_013331) | data analysis service, database, software resource, data access protocol, web service, service resource, storage service resource, production service resource, data repository, data or information resource, analysis service resource | Functional genomic database for malaria parasites. Database for Plasmodium spp. Provides resource for data analysis and visualization in gene-by-gene or genome-wide scale. PlasmoDB 5.5 contains annotated genomes, evidence of transcription, proteomics evidence, protein function evidence, population biology and evolution data. Data can be queried by selecting from query grid or drop down menus. Results can be combined with each other on query history page. Search results can be downloaded with associated functional data and registered users can store their query history for future retrieval or analysis.Key community database for malaria researchers, intersecting many types of laboratory and computational data, aggregated by gene. | Functional, genomic, database, malaria, parasite, data, analysis, visualization, gene, genome, annotation, transcription, proteomics, protein, evolution, FASEB list |
uses: SynView is related to: GeneDB Pfalciparum has parent organization: Eukaryotic Pathogen Database Resources has parent organization: Pennsylvania State University has parent organization: University of Georgia; Georgia; USA |
malaria | NIAID | PMID:18957442 | nif-0000-03314, SCR_017665 | SCR_013331 | PlasmoDB, Plasmodium Genomics Resource, PlasmoDB 5.5, Plasmodium genome-resource | 2026-02-15 09:20:44 | 1239 | ||||||
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Collaboratory of AIDS Researchers for Eradciation (CARE) Resource Report Resource Website |
Collaboratory of AIDS Researchers for Eradciation (CARE) (RRID:SCR_013681) | CARE | organization portal, data or information resource, consortium, portal | The Collaboratory of AIDS Researchers for Eradication (CARE) is a consortium of scientific experts in the field of HIV latency from several U.S. and European academic research institutions as well as Merck Research Laboratories working together to find a cure for HIV. | AIDS, HIV, drug development, data-sharing enabler, |
is related to: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine; North Carolina; USA is related to: Gladstone Institute of Neurological Disease is related to: UCSF School of Medicine; California; USA is related to: Case Western Reserve University; Ohio; USA is related to: Merck is related to: UC Davis School of Medicine; California; USA is related to: University of California at San Diego; California; USA is related to: University of Utah School of Medicine; Utah; USA is related to: University of Minnesota Twin Cities; Minnesota; USA |
NIAID ; NIMH |
SCR_013681 | 2026-02-15 09:20:44 | 0 |
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