Are you sure you want to leave this community? Leaving the community will revoke any permissions you have been granted in this community.
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.
Tool for calling indels in Tumor-Normal paired sample mode.
Proper citation: SomaticIndelDetector (RRID:SCR_005107) Copy
http://patchwork.r-forge.r-project.org/
Software tool for analyzing and visualizing allele-specific copy numbers and loss-of-heterozygosity in cancer genomes. The data input is in the format of whole-genome sequencing data which enables characterization of genomic alterations ranging in size from point mutations to entire chromosomes. High quality results are obtained even if samples have low coverage, ~4x, low tumor cell content or are aneuploid. Patchwork takes BAM files as input whereas PatchworkCG takes input from CompleteGenomics files. TAPS performs the same analysis as Patchwork but for microarray data.
Proper citation: Patchwork (RRID:SCR_000072) Copy
http://bioinfo-out.curie.fr/projects/snp_gap/
Software for automatic detection of absolute segmental copy numbers and genotype status in complex cancer genome profiles measured by single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) arrays. The method is based on pattern recognition of segmented and smoothed copy number and allelic imbalance profiles. The method performs well even for poor-quality data, low tumor content, and highly rearranged tumor genomes.
Proper citation: Genome Alteration Print (RRID:SCR_012016) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on October 6th, 2022. The biobank comprises paraffin blocks of surgical and autopsy tissue samples and corresponding histological slides as well as cytological material consisting of slides of vaginal smears, fine needle aspiration biopsies and exfoliative cytological material. The tissue samples date back until 1944 and most of the cytological samples until 1970. A subunit of the bank constitutes the National Tissue Microarray Centre. This center is supported by SWEGENE with the purpose to organize and construct tissue microarrays (TMA:s) for high throughput molecular pathology research on various kinds of tumors and other diseases. By linking the TMA.s to long-term and complete clinical follow-up data, prognostic and predictive studies will be facilitated. Biobank content: * Approximately 2,4 million paraffin blocks of surgical tissue specimens, * 1,1 million paraffin blocks of tissue samples from autopsies, * 3,8 million histological slides and * 1,6 million cytology slides. At present, the Tissue Microarray Centre includes: * A consecutive series of all invasive breast cancers (n=600) diagnosed in Malmo between 1988 and 1992. * All incident breast cancers within the Malmo Diet and Cancer cohort (n=400). * A subgroup of 600 pre-menopausal primary breast cancers within the nationwide, population-based randomized tamoxifen trial SBII:2. * 180 primary breast cancers from post-menopausal women included in a similar study. * A set of 120 extremely well characterized primary breast cancer samples with a clinical follow-up of 10 years. More than 40 relevant tumor biological parameters have been recorded in this material and it is therefore useful for a first screening of a marker in order to identify associations to other gene products. * 350 renal cell carcinomas (In collaboration with NUS). We provide researchers with state-of-the-art population based tissue microarrays with long-term and complete follow-up data on survival and treatment. With the TMA-technology, valuable biobank material will be preserved, allowing high throughput in-situ analyses of various tumors and other diseases with a minimal waste of tissue.
Proper citation: UMAS University Hospital - Biobanks of the Department of Clinical Pathology and Cytology (RRID:SCR_005957) Copy
https://www.urmc.rochester.edu/neurosurgery/specialties/neurooncology.aspx
Collaborative neuro-oncology research program with a tissue repository (tumor bank) containing a wide range of clinical specimens, which they make available to researchers in order to study the effects of new drugs on a large number and wide range of tumor specimens. They provide highly coordinated, complex care in neurosurgery, radiation oncology, medical oncology, and neurology to patients afflicted with tumors of the brain and spine by combining the newest technologies and treatments available anywhere in the world. The program is formed from a multidisciplinary group with a goal of helping patients navigate the complex issues surrounding brain and spinal cancer care. The researchers are working to increase the number of targets that could be considered for anti-angiogenesis therapy. Many of their studies focus on the blood vessel cells (endothelial cells) themselves, which, unlike tumor cells, rarely mutate and so might be less likely to become resistant to therapy and are also more easily reached through the bloodstream. Their researchers are also attempting to better understand the changes in the blood-brain barrier (BBB) that are associated with fluid accumulation and brain swelling (edema) in neuro-oncology patients. Normal brain tissue is shielded from the rest of the body by the BBB. This barrier is composed of very tight blood vessels that prevent most substances from entering the brain. Brain tumors have a leaky BBB ����?? this feature can be used to identify tumors on MRI scans. They have identified specific molecules that appear to be associated with the leaky, abnormal vessels while the normal blood vessels with intact BBB produce these molecules at very low levels or not at all. Inhibiting the function of these molecules may help control or prevent disruption of the BBB and limit cerebral edema in brain tumor patients, as well as patients suffering from stroke or traumatic brain injury.
Proper citation: University of Rochester Program for Brain Tumors and Spinal Tumors (RRID:SCR_005343) Copy
http://ranchobiosciences.com/gse1456/
Curated series of expression data for 159 tumors from which RNA could be collected in sufficient amounts and quality for analysis from breast cancer patients. Tissue material was collected from all breast cancer patients receiving surgery at Karolinska Hospital from 1994-1996.
Proper citation: GSE1456 (RRID:SCR_003642) Copy
http://www.stanford.edu/~rnusse/pathways/targets.html
A list of target genes of Wnt/beta-catenin signaling. Suggestions for additions are welcome. Direct targets are defined as those with Tcf binding sites and demonstrating that these sites are important.
Proper citation: Target genes of Wnt/beta-catenin signaling (RRID:SCR_007022) Copy
https://www.jax.org/jax-mice-and-services/in-vivo-pharmacology/mouse-tumor-biology-database
Database supports use of mouse model system for human cancer by providing comprehensive resource for data and information on various tumor models.
Proper citation: Mouse Tumor Biology Database (RRID:SCR_006517) Copy
http://ercsb.ewha.ac.kr:8080/FusionGene/
Knowledgebase of fusion transcripts collected from various public resources such as the Sanger CGP, OMIM, PubMed, and Mitelman's database. It is an alignment viewer to facilitate examining reliability of fusion transcripts and inferring functional significance., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.
Proper citation: ChimerDB (RRID:SCR_007596) Copy
http://www.mycancergenome.org/
A freely available online personalized cancer medicine knowledge resource for physicians, patients, caregivers and researchers that gives up-to-date information on what mutations make cancers grow and related therapeutic implications, including available clinical trials. It is a one-stop tool that matches tumor mutations to therapies, making information accessible and convenient for busy clinicians.
Proper citation: My Cancer Genome (RRID:SCR_004140) Copy
Open access resource for human proteins. Used to search for specific genes or proteins or explore different resources, each focusing on particular aspect of the genome-wide analysis of the human proteins: Tissue, Brain, Single Cell, Subcellular, Cancer, Blood, Cell line, Structure and Interaction. Swedish-based program to map all human proteins in cells, tissues, and organs using integration of various omics technologies, including antibody-based imaging, mass spectrometry-based proteomics, transcriptomics, and systems biology. All the data in the knowledge resource is open access to allow scientists both in academia and industry to freely access the data for exploration of the human proteome.
Proper citation: The Human Protein Atlas (RRID:SCR_006710) Copy
http://hcc.musc.edu/research/resources/biorepository/
The Hollings Cancer Center Tissue Biorepository & Research Pathology Services Shared Resource provides investigators with a centralized infrastructure that promotes biomedical research involving the use and study of human biospecimens. The shared resource is comprised of four integrated components: Biospecimens and data bank, Laser Capture Microdissection, Tissue Microarray, and Research Pathology Services. These components, along with extensive staff expertise, offer a comprehensive means by which researchers can utilize valuable human biospecimens and cutting edge technology to support basic, translational and clinical research. Services: * Biospecimen and Data Bank ** Collecting, processing, and banking of tissue, saliva, urine, blood, plasma, serum, and other tissue derivatives; including those for protocol driven studies ** Retrieval of banked specimens linked to clinicopathologic data, while maintaining patient confidentiality, for research use ** Quality control of collected tissue by the Tissue Biorepository Director, a trained pathologist: verification of diseased state and assessment of tumor purity, etc ** Quality control of DNA/RNA/protein isolated from collected tissue using the Agilent Bioanalyzer * Laser Capture Microdissection ** Identification, localization, and microdissection of targeted cell populations (from human and animal tissue sources) ** Extraction of DNA/RNA/protein from microdissected samples. ** Quality analysis and quality control of isolated nucleic acid using Agilent Bioanalyzer * Tissue Microarray ** Create custom and standard TMAs ** Consultation and technical support in the construction and analyses of TMA * Research Pathology Services ** Macrodissection of tissue prior to isolation of DNA/RNA/protein to increase tumor purity ** Immunohistochemistry and In-situ hybridization ** Quantitative image analysis on conventional and TMA sections, including tissue scoring, Ki-67 labeling index, microvascular density counting, and tissue microarray scoring, etc. * Bio-molecular Assessment ** Cellular DNA, RNA and protein prepared by the Tissue Repository from banked specimens or any other biomolecules submitted by investigators can be qualitatively assessed by Agilent Bioanalyzer, prior to use for downstream applications such as microarray and/or qRT-PCR analysis
Proper citation: Hollings Cancer Center Tissue Biorepository and Research Pathology Services Shared Resource (RRID:SCR_004626) Copy
http://neurosurgery.ucsf.edu/index.php/research_tissue_bank.html
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on May 4th,2023. Brain Tumor Research Center Tissue Bank began collecting tissue in 1978 and has established an organized repository of characterized tissues--frozen, paraffin-embedded, blood and cultures--that are maintained in a manner useful for a wide range of studies. Samples are collected only from patients who have agreed to have their tissues banked and used for future research. Consent documents are maintained in a secure area and associated clinical data are held in a double-password protected computer database. Each sample received into the Tissue Bank is non-identifying number. No protected health information (PHI) is released. To obtain samples, investigators submit a request form to the Manager. The request form requires an explanation of the tissue requested (type, number of samples, justification), description of the study, CHR approval (see new policy regarding human vs. non-human research) and Project Leader authorization. The Manager reviews each request for feasibility before presentation to the Scientific Core Committee. The UCSF Neurosurgery Tissue Bank makes its inventory of stock cell lines available to all investigators. Requested cells are grown in T-25 flasks and shipped FedEx Priority Overnight at the receipient's expense. However, if you prefer, we can ship the frozen cells, packed in dry ice. (Note: some countries restrict dry ice shipments.)
Proper citation: UCSF Brain Tumor Tissue Bank (RRID:SCR_000647) Copy
http://www.som.soton.ac.uk/research/sites/cruk/translation/tumour.asp
Collects and distributes human tissue for ethically approved studies to aid the study of cancer biology and other associated research. All tissue is collected with patient consent and tissue is distributed only to ethically approved studies. The purpose of the Tissue Bank is to source, organize, collect, prepare, store and distribute a diverse collection of human tissues and biological products. This valuable core resource is available to all local academics and researchers. The on-site bank allows for rapid access to a plethora of biological materials supported by an informatics system of databases acting as an inventory management system. In addition, the Tissue Bank provides a licensed facility to store surplus tissue when studies close. Tissues currently available include normal and malignant snap frozen blocks, freshly prepared spleen and lymph nodes, fresh biopsy tissues, blood products and biological fluids. Collections can be organized by bank staff or ran in parallel with current research activities and include a wide variety of cancer classifications. We currently hold over 38,000 vials. Tissue Availability: Lymphoma - solid tissue and cells - 843; Breast - solid tissue and cells - 540; Colon - solid tissue and cells - 238; Lung - solid tissue and cells - 43; Upper Gi - BIOPSY tissue - 114; Pleural fluid and cells - 14
Proper citation: Southampton Tumour Bank (RRID:SCR_000673) Copy
http://www.startthecure.com/clinical_tumor_bank.php
Biospecimen repository for tumor specimens, available to all researchers actively engaged in cancer research whether they are in University, Academic, or Pharmaceutical industry, with a goal to accelerate the discovery and development of new agents for the treatment and cure of cancer. The START tumor bank was created to make tumor tissue gifted by patients receiving care or treatment at The START Center available to all researchers involved in developing a better understanding of the biology of cancer or those engaged in the discovery of new therapies. The START Tumor Bank is a department within the PK Department and handles skin and tumor biopsies required by clinical trial protocols. A member of the PK Department is present during biopsy procedures for immediate processing of the sample for the trial. Additionally, the Tumor Bank collects and banks the tumor tissues of patients who consent. This tissue is then stored for future use by researchers developing new therapies.
Proper citation: START Tumor Bank (RRID:SCR_004258) Copy
http://www.umassmed.edu/cancercenter/tissuebank/index.aspx
The UMass Cancer Center Tissue and Tumor Bank is a dynamic tissue procurement service: Collection, Storage, Annotation, and Distribution of Human Biologic Specimens. Our goal is to facilitate basic science, clinical research and translational studies by providing researchers with the ability to obtain and study human tissues using a dynamic collection, storage, annotation, and distribution service. * Fresh, diseased tissue is collected and processed immediately after surgery. ** When possible, surrounding healthy tissue is collected as a matched normal control. ** Anonymous, de-identified clinical and pathologic data are linked to the specimens in a secure database. * Bone marrow and blood specimens are collected and available as fresh cell isolates, frozen cell isolates or unprocessed. * A variety of services are available including routine histology, fresh tissue for cell culture, frozen sections, as well as DNA and RNA extraction. * Specific study needs can be met. * Consultation during study design is available and recommended. Contact Us * Assistance in the IRB approval process is offered. ** New: IRB approval is required only if you need identifiable private clinical information and/or patient follow-up for your study. The UMass Cancer Center Tissue and Tumor Bank is an open access biorepository. Specimens are available to investigators both internal and external to UMass. The Tumor Bank ships specimens to researchers worldwide. Please contact us to determine if we have specimens that meet your research needs.
Proper citation: UMass Cancer Center Tissue and Tumor Bank (RRID:SCR_004447) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on January 9, 2023. In this web site you will find the central European database of OECI-TuBaFrost collecting the information of biobanks or in the project support environment on human material; i.e., frozen tumor tissue specimens, pathology blocks, blood samples in different forms, cell lines, Tissue Micro Arrays, etc. Our goal is by centralizing the tumor tissues information to facilitate the search of doctors / researchers for tumor materials, which they need for their cancer research there with facilitating cancer research. OECI members only can participate in the OECI-TuBaFrost exchange platform, or those introduced by an OECI member. We are a group of pathology and research departments as well as bio-bankers in clinical based biobanking based in comprehensive cancer centers or hospitals with a competence in comprehensive cancer care across Europe. Each participating institute is involved in cancer research resulting in innovative procedures, new drugs, improved diagnosis and new insights in disease development. The overall result is better care and treatment for cancer patients. To maximize the scientific value of the human tissue samples, information about the clinical status of the patient in combination with the quality and type of samples is very important. A TuBaFrost electronic database will securely store all this information. Within the closed project supporting environments, the data collected will include: * Diagnosis - identification of the type of cancer * Type of tissue collected - the origin, i.e. breast, skin, colorectal * Quality of tissue collected - collection and storage details The tissue is stored in the hospital where the donor was diagnosed/treated. It stays there until it is used or sent to another hospital or research center within the TuBaFrost group. The electronic database will track samples throughout the network. The tissue is not sold. The exchange of tissue to other hospitals is regulated by a contract, which uses the national regulations of the country supplying the tissue. Tissue samples within the TuBaFrost collection will only be used for research, which has been approved by ethics committees. This ensures that the tissue is only used for the best quality research and only for the specific reasons given to the ethics committee.
Proper citation: OECI - Tubafrost: The European Human Frozen Tissue Bank (RRID:SCR_004280) Copy
https://htrn.osu.edu/Services/Biorepository/Pages/default.aspx
The HTRN biospecimen bank is comprised of samples for the Ohio State University Cancer and Leukemia Group B Pathology Coordinating Office (CALGB-PCO) and the Ohio State University Midwestern Division of the Cooperative Human Tissue Network (CHTN). The CALGB-PCO banks biospecimens donated by patients enrolled in clinical trials. Samples can include tumor and normal tissue, plasma, serum, whole blood and white blood cells and urine. All of these samples are used later in correlative studies. The Midwestern Division of the CHTN stores a temporary biospecimen bank of tumor and normal tissue, tissue slides and paraffin embedded tissue blocks for research investigators throughout the country and Canada who are trying to find a cure for cancer. As part of the HTRN biospecimen bank, a Rees Scientific equipment monitoring system helps to secure the integrity and quality of samples stored in the biorepository. Scientific research within the HTRN is currently underway to determine the best methods in tissue storage for long term use. The NCI First-Generation Guidelines for NCI-Supported Biorepositories and the NCI Best Practices for Biospecimen Resources are continuously reviewed and adapted by the HTRN.
Proper citation: Ohio State Biorepository (RRID:SCR_004714) Copy
http://cancer.case.edu/sharedresources/tissue/
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on January 11, 2023. The Case Comprehensive Cancer Center''s Biorepository and Tissue Processing Core Facility (BTPC) serves two primary functions: 1. To build an inventory of remnant human tissues, blood and other body fluids (collectively termed biospecimens) targeted towards cancer and other medical research, for later assignment to investigators; and 2. To provide long term, controlled storage of biospecimens for specific researchers. These samples are for research purposes only and may not be used for clinical diagnosis or implantation into humans. Clinical information relating to the samples and donors are collected and maintained in a secure database. Samples and data are de-identified or de-linked before release to the researcher unless he/she has specific IRB approval to gain access to this information. Remnant biospecimens are prospectively collected from surgical procedures, autopsies and clinical laboratories for the BTPC by the Human Tissue Procurement Facility (HTPF), which operates under UH-IRB Protocol 01-02-45. Blood and bone marrow specimens are collected for the BTPC by the Hematopoietic Stem Cell Core Facility (HSCC), which operates under UH-IRB Protocol 09-90-195. The Division of Surgical Pathology at University Hospitals Case Medical Center (UHCMC) has clinical archives of paraffin blocks that can be made available through the BTPC for retrospective research studies under the approval of the Vice Chair for Clinical Affairs at UHCMC. Surgical Pathologists associated with the BTPC are responsible for determining which blocks can be made available and how much material can be removed from the blocks. Types of Tissue Available * Malignant, benign, diseased, normal and normal human tissues * Normal adjacent tissues available paired with tumor specimens in many cases * Tissues are collected from over 50 anatomic sites * Frozen specimens, OCT-embedded and paraffin-embedded tissues * Large array of paraffin-embedded specimens from clinical archives of paraffin blocks and QC research blocks maintained by the HTPF * Peripheral blood and bone marrow samples from initial visits and follow-up procedures are processed to obtain serum and cell fractions for storage * No samples are collected from individuals with known infectious illnesses * Fetal biospecimens are not collected due to state and local statutes
Proper citation: Case Comprehensive Cancer Center Biorepository and Tissue Processing Core Facility (RRID:SCR_004382) Copy
Leading treatment, research and teaching center for complex neurological conditions based at the University Hospital and the UC College of Medicine. Its physicians and researchers have created national models for evidence-based treatment and research of complex conditions, including ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke, brain aneurysms, brain and spinal cord trauma, brain tumors, Parkinson's disease, epilepsy and seizure disorders, multiple sclerosis, trigeminal neuralgia, Alzheimer's disease and memory disorders, mood disorders, and neuromuscular disorders. UCNI includes a team of more than 100 experts from 15 specialties who collaborate across disciplines to provide the most comprehensive diagnoses and treatments possible.
Proper citation: University of Cincinnati Neuroscience Institute (RRID:SCR_005345) Copy
Can't find your Tool?
We recommend that you click next to the search bar to check some helpful tips on searches and refine your search firstly. Alternatively, please register your tool with the SciCrunch Registry by adding a little information to a web form, logging in will enable users to create a provisional RRID, but it not required to submit.
Welcome to the NIF Resources search. From here you can search through a compilation of resources used by NIF and see how data is organized within our community.
You are currently on the Community Resources tab looking through categories and sources that NIF has compiled. You can navigate through those categories from here or change to a different tab to execute your search through. Each tab gives a different perspective on data.
If you have an account on NIF then you can log in from here to get additional features in NIF such as Collections, Saved Searches, and managing Resources.
Here is the search term that is being executed, you can type in anything you want to search for. Some tips to help searching:
You can save any searches you perform for quick access to later from here.
We recognized your search term and included synonyms and inferred terms along side your term to help get the data you are looking for.
If you are logged into NIF you can add data records to your collections to create custom spreadsheets across multiple sources of data.
Here are the sources that were queried against in your search that you can investigate further.
Here are the categories present within NIF that you can filter your data on
Here are the subcategories present within this category that you can filter your data on
If you have any further questions please check out our FAQs Page to ask questions and see our tutorials. Click this button to view this tutorial again.