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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.
Public depository that collects, annotates, archives, and disseminates important spectral and quantitative data derived from nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopic investigations of biological macromolecules and metabolites. Provides reference information and maintains a collection of NMR pulse sequences and computer software for biomolecular NMR.
Proper citation: Biological Magnetic Resonance Data Bank (BMRB) (RRID:SCR_002296) Copy
http://www.findmice.org/index.jsp
Database of mouse strains and stocks available worldwide, that will assist international research community in finding mouse resources they need, including inbred, mutant, and genetically engineered mice. IMSR is multi institutional international collaboration supporting use of mouse as model system for studying human biology and disease. IMSR began with initial collaboration between Mouse Genome Informatics (MGI) group at Jackson Laboratory and Medical Research Council Mammalian Genetics Unit at Harwell. Additional institutions and collaborators are now contributing mouse resource information to IMSR. Data content found in IMSR is as it was supplied by data provider sites. You are encouraged to participate in making this database as complete as possible for all worldwide mouse strain resources. If you or your institution hold mice, cryopreserved gametes or embryos, or ES cell lines that you distribute to other researchers, contributing information about them to IMSR catalog will make them more widely known.
Proper citation: International Mouse Strain Resource (RRID:SCR_001526) Copy
Data and tools for studying the function of DNA sequences, with an emphasis on those involved in the production of hemoglobin. It includes information about naturally-occurring human hemoglobin mutations and their effects, experimental data related to the regulation of the beta-like globin gene cluster, and software tools for comparing sequences with one another to discover regions that are likely to play significant roles.
Proper citation: Globin Gene Server (RRID:SCR_001480) Copy
Database of traceable, standardized, annotated gene signatures which have been manually curated from publications that are indexed in PubMed. The Advanced Gene Search will perform a One-tailed Fisher Exact Test (which is equivalent to Hypergeometric Distribution) to test if your gene list is over-represented in any gene signature in GeneSigDB. Gene expression studies typically result in a list of genes (gene signature) which reflect the many biological pathways that are concurrently active. We have created a Gene Signature Data Base (GeneSigDB) of published gene expression signatures or gene sets which we have manually extracted from published literature. GeneSigDB was creating following a thorough search of PubMed using defined set of cancer gene signature search terms. We would be delighted to accept or update your gene signature. Please fill out the form as best you can. We will contact you when we get it and will be happy to work with you to ensure we accurately report your signature. GeneSigDB is capable of providing its functionality through a Java RESTful web service.
Proper citation: GeneSigDB (RRID:SCR_013275) Copy
i2b2 (Informatics for Integrating Biology and the Bedside) is an NIH-funded National Center for Biomedical Computing based at Partners HealthCare System. The i2b2 Center is developing a scalable informatics framework that will enable clinical researchers to use existing clinical data for discovery research and, when combined with IRB-approved genomic data, facilitate the design of targeted therapies for individual patients with diseases having genetic origin. For some resources (e.g. software) the use of the resource requires accepting a specific (e.g. OpenSource) license.
Proper citation: Informatics for Integrating Biology and the Bedside (RRID:SCR_013629) Copy
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/about/pubreader/
A web application which serves as an alternate way to read scientific literature in PubMed Central and Bookshelf. PubReader features an easy-to-read multi-column display, a figure strip for access to figures, and a search function. It is designed especially to support reading on tablets and other smaller devices but is available for reading on laptops and desktops.
Proper citation: PubReader (RRID:SCR_013814) Copy
http://www.nitrc.org/projects/hdbig/
A collection of software tools for high dimensional brain imaging genomics. These tools are designed to perform comprehensive joint analysis of heterogeneous imaging genomics data. HDBIG-SR is an HDBIG toolkit for sparse regression while HDBIG-SCCA is an HDBIG toolkit for sparse association.
Proper citation: HDBIG (RRID:SCR_014120) Copy
http://www.nitrc.org/projects/score/
A collection of methods for comparing the performance of different image algorithms. These methods generate quantitative scores that measure divergences to a standard.
Proper citation: SCORE (RRID:SCR_014165) Copy
http://ccb.jhu.edu/software/hisat2/index.shtml
Graph-based alignment of next generation sequencing reads to a population of genomes.
Proper citation: HISAT2 (RRID:SCR_015530) Copy
Visualization and analysis software for interactive visual exploration and mining of fiber-tracts and brain networks with their genetic determinants and functional outcomes. BECA includes an fMRI and Diseases Analysis version as well as a Genome Explorer version.
Proper citation: BECA (RRID:SCR_015846) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 23,2022. ATGC stands for Alignable Tight Genomic Cluster, which is cluster of closely related prokaryotic genomes. ATGC is the principal notion of this web resource. The purpose of this web resource is to prepare ATGC-derived data sets for a variety of research projects in functional and evolutionary genomics. Unique features of ATGC include: * Reliable identification of orthologs (high degree of similarity between the genomes in the set allow an extensive use of synteny in ortholog identification); * Fine granularity of protein classification (in comparisons of more distant genomes, proteins belonging to families of paralogs are often lumped into a singlegroup; under the ATGC approach, comparison of genomic sequences from highly similar genomes allows one to track each set of orthologs separately); * Relative rarity of changes of any kind (in sequence, genome organization and gene content) allows the use of parsimony-related methods of analysis.
Proper citation: Alignable Tight Genomic Cluster (RRID:SCR_001894) Copy
Collection of data of protein sequence and functional information. Resource for protein sequence and annotation data. Consortium for preservation of the UniProt databases: UniProt Knowledgebase (UniProtKB), UniProt Reference Clusters (UniRef), and UniProt Archive (UniParc), UniProt Proteomes. Collaboration between European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI), SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics and Protein Information Resource. Swiss-Prot is a curated subset of UniProtKB.
Proper citation: UniProt (RRID:SCR_002380) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented July 15, 2016. Database containing location and descriptive information about a wide variety of information resources including organizations, research resources, projects, and databases concerned with health and biomedicine. This information may not be readily available in bibliographic databases. Each record may contain information on the publications, holdings, and services provided. These information resources fall into many categories including federal, state, and local government agencies; information and referral centers; professional societies; self-help groups and voluntary associations; academic and research institutions and their programs; information systems and research facilities. Topics include HIV/AIDS, maternal and child health, most diseases and conditions including genetic and other rare diseases, health services research and technology assessment. DIRLINE can be searched using subject words (such as disease or condition) including Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) or for the name or location of a resource. It now offers an A to Z list of over 8,500 organizations.
Proper citation: Directory of Health Organizations Online (RRID:SCR_002331) Copy
http://lcg.rit.albany.edu/dp-bind
This web-server takes a user-supplied sequence of a DNA-binding protein and predicts residue positions involved in interactions with DNA. Prediction can be performed using a profile of evolutionary conservation of the input sequence automatically generated by the web-server or the input sequence alone. Three prediction methods are run for each input sequence and consensus prediction is generated.
Proper citation: DP-Bind: a web server for sequence-based prediction of DNA-binding residues in DNA-binding proteins (RRID:SCR_003039) Copy
Web server based on the Enhancer Identification (EI) method, to determine the chromosomal location and functional characteristics of distant regulatory elements (REs) in higher eukaryotic genomes. The server uses gene co-expression data, comparative genomics, and combinatorics of transcription factor binding sites (TFBSs) to find TFBS-association signatures that can be used for discriminating specific regulatory functions. DiRE's unique feature is the detection of REs outside of proximal promoter regions, as it takes advantage of the full gene locus to conduct the search. DiRE can predict common REs for any set of input genes for which the user has prior knowledge of co-expression, co-function, or other biologically meaningful grouping. The server predicts function-specific REs consisting of clusters of specifically-associated TFBSs, and it also scores the association of individual TFs with the biological function shared by the group of input genes. Its integration with the Array2BIO server allows users to start their analysis with raw microarray expression data.
Proper citation: Distant Regulatory Elements (RRID:SCR_003058) Copy
http://snyderome.stanford.edu/
Data set generated by personal omics profiling of Dr. Michael Snyder at Stanford University. It combines genomic, transcriptomic, proteomic, metabolomic, and autoantibody profiles from a single individual over a 14 month period. The analysis revealed various medical risks, including type II diabetes. It also uncovered extensive, dynamic changes in diverse molecular components and biological pathways across healthy and diseased conditions.
Proper citation: iPOP (RRID:SCR_008991) Copy
https://github.com/EpistasisLab/ReBATE
Open source software Python package to compare relief based feature selection algorithms used in data mining. Used for feature selection in any bioinformatics problem with potentially predictive features and target outcome variable, to detect feature interactions without examination of all feature combinations, to detect features involved in heterogeneous patterns of association such as genetic heterogeneity .
Proper citation: ReBATE (RRID:SCR_017139) Copy
https://pypi.org/project/pmlb/
Python wrapper for Penn Machine Learning Benchmark data repository. Large, curated repository of benchmark datasets for evaluating supervised machine learning algorithms. Part of PyPI https://pypi.org/
Proper citation: Penn machine learning benchmark repository (RRID:SCR_017138) Copy
http://sourceforge.net/apps/mediawiki/mummergpu/index.php?title=MUMmerGPU
Software tool as high throughput DNA sequence alignment program that runs on nVidia G80-class GPUs. Aligns sequences in parallel on video card to accelerate widely used serial CPU program MUMmer.
Proper citation: MUMmerGPU (RRID:SCR_001200) Copy
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/guide/sitemap/
The National Center for Biotechnology Information''s listing of resources. Sort by alphabetical character, Databases, Downloads, Submissions, Tools and How-To; or by Topic: Chemicals & Bioassays; Data & Software; DNA & RNA; Domains & Structures; Genes & Expression; Genetics & Medicine; Genomes & Maps; Homology; Literature; Proteins; Sequence Analysis; Taxonomy; Training & Tutorials; Variation.
Proper citation: NCBI Resource List (RRID:SCR_005628) Copy
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