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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://www.civm.duhs.duke.edu/
Biomedical technology research center dedicated to the development of novel imaging methods for the basic scientist and the application of the methods to important biomedical questions. The CIVM has played a major role in the development of magnetic resonance microscopy with specialized MR imaging systems capable of imaging at more than 500,000x higher resolution than is common in the clinical domain. The CIVM was the first to demonstrate MR images using hyperpolarized 3He which has been moved from mouse to man with recent clinical trials performed at Duke in collaboration with GE. More recently the CIVM has developed the molecular imaging workbench---a system dedicated to multimodality cardiopulmonary imaging in the rodent. Their collaborators are employing these unique imaging systems in an extraordinary range of mouse and rat models of neurologic disease, cardiopulmonary disease and cancer to illuminate the underlying biology and explore new therapies.
Proper citation: Center for In Vivo Microscopy (RRID:SCR_001426) Copy
http://bpg.utoledo.edu/~afedorov/lab/eid.html
Data sets of protein-coding intron-containing genes that contain gene information from humans, mice, rats, and other eukaryotes, as well as genes from species whose genomes have not been completely sequenced. This is a comprehensive and convenient dataset of sequences for computational biologists who study exon-intron gene structures and pre-mRNA splicing. The database is derived from GenBank release 112, and it contains protein-coding genes that harbor introns, along with extensive descriptions of each gene and its DNA and protein sequences, as well as splice motif information. They have created subdatabases of genes whose intron positions have been experimentally determined. The collection also contains data on untranslated regions of gene sequences and intron-less genes. For species with entirely sequenced genomes, species-specific databases have been generated. A novel Mammalian Orthologous Intron Database (MOID) has been introduced which includes the full set of introns that come from orthologous genes that have the same positions relative to the reading frames.
Proper citation: EID: Exon-Intron Database (RRID:SCR_002469) Copy
Interactive diagram containing existing knowledge of hippocampal-parahippocampal connections in which any connection can be turned on or off at the level of cortical layers. It includes references for each connection.
Proper citation: Temporal-Lobe: Hippocampal - Parahippocampal Neuroanatomy of the Rat (RRID:SCR_002816) Copy
http://drtc.bsd.uchicago.edu/islet-cell-biology-core-about/
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on November 7,2024. Core which provides services and hands-on training in the isolation and functional characterization of pancreatic islets from normal and diabetic humans and mice. It also maintains a repository of insulinoma cell lines for distribution. It puts emphasis on facilitating studies of primary islet cells and it has developed many unique tools and techniques for carrying such studies including novel animals models, biophysical methods and a library of adenovirus-based expression constructs for studying beta-cell function.
Proper citation: University of Chicago Diabetes Research and Training Center Islet Cell Biology Core (RRID:SCR_015132) Copy
http://diabetesresearchcenter.dom.wustl.edu/translational-diagnostics-core/
Core provides range of assays for human and animal hormones, peptides, and metabolites related to metabolic disorders.
Proper citation: Washington University School of Medicine Diabetes Research Center Translational Diagnostics Core (RRID:SCR_015161) Copy
http://livercenter.yale.edu/core-facilities/cellular-molecular-physiology-core-facility.aspx
Core facility that provides technical expertise, equipment and personnel to Liver Center Investigators who wish to work with animal models of liver disease, isolated liver cells, or gene expression in liver tissue. The Cell Isolation sub-core isolates hepatocytes and non-parenchymal liver cells primarily from rat and mouse, while the Molecular Biology sub-core provides equipment and expertise to Liver Center members in a centralized facility.
Proper citation: Yale Liver Center Cellular and Molecular Physiology Core (RRID:SCR_015258) Copy
http://www.norc.uab.edu/corefacilities/animalmodels
Core that provides specialized expertise in the use of animal models and instrumentation to facilitate animal research related to nutrition and obesity.
Proper citation: University of Alabama at Birmingham Nutrition and Obesity Research Center Animal Models Core (RRID:SCR_015466) Copy
https://irp.drugabuse.gov/OTTC/rats.php
Core facility and data repository which creates and characterizes transgenic rats for use in models of neurological diseases, such as addiction and neurodegeneration. Researchers can request strain(s) from RRRC or go to the Transgenic Rat Request page.
Proper citation: Optogenetics and Transgenic Technology Core (RRID:SCR_014785) Copy
http://corefacilities.case.edu/animal.php
A set of core facilities of Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine which allows users to create and analyze in vivo animal models. The various facilities provide animal care, transgenic models, imaging, irradiation, and phenotyping for research concerning such topics as cancer, metabolic processes, and behavior. In vivo animals provided include mice, zebrafish, and rodents.
Proper citation: CWRU In Vivo Animal Facilities (RRID:SCR_014209) Copy
http://medicine.tamhsc.edu/irm/msc-distribution.html
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on October 29,2025. Center for cell line distribution and stock at Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine Institute for Regenerative Medicine. Scott & White have received a grant funded by the NIH to provide well-characterized human adult stem cells, rat stem cells, and mouse stem cells to academic researchers worldwide upon request.
Proper citation: Texas A and M Health Science Center MSC Distribution (RRID:SCR_005522) Copy
Public data warehouse for searching cell line data extracted from both ATCC and HyperCLDB. The knowledge base uses the Cell Line Ontology, created with the Protege ontology editing tool from the National Center for Biomedical Ontologies (NCBO) and merges concepts from other ontologies, including the Cell Type Ontology. The Cell Line Knowledge Base uses our Cell Line Ontology as the underlying data model. The ontology defines the following cell line attributes: Cell Line ID, Organism, Tissue, Pathology, Growth Mode, MeSH ID. To report errors in the data or to add cell line data to the knowledge base, please email: clbk-data (at) umich.edu
Proper citation: Cell Line Knowledge Base (RRID:SCR_005832) Copy
http://cmbn-approd01.uio.no/zoomgen/hippocampus/home.do
An interactive reference atlas providing a systematic overview of cyto- and chemoarchectonical features of the hippocampus proper, fasciola, and associated parahippocampal cortices. This atlas system has been developed to serve the need to integrate detailed descriptions of structures and criteria defining boundaries and atlas images in which the underlying histological features can be explored. Features * Alphabetical and hierarchical overview of 18 hippocampal structures * Detailed, illustrated descriptions of 63 boundaries * Interactive image repository with ~100 coronal histological images stained for NeuN, calbindin, and parvalbumin * Triple image viewer in which differently stained neighboring sections can be interactively compared * Graphical overlay of substructures based on described boundary criteria * Bidirectional links between structure descriptions and image repository The atlas is based on histological material from an adult Long Evans rat, stained for NeuN, calbindin, and parvalbumin. The system is intended for researchers working in the field, as well as students interested in this brain region. The atlas is accessed through the structure index or image viewer. Re-use of data from this repository is allowed provided that reference is given to the publication.
Proper citation: Rat Hippocampus Atlas (RRID:SCR_005552) Copy
https://database.riken.jp/sw/en/The_RIKEN_integrated_database_of_mammals/ria254i/
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on August 16, 2019.
A database that integrates not only RIKEN''''s original large-scale mammalian databases, such as FANTOM, the ENU mutagenesis program, the RIKEN Cerebellar Development Transcriptome Database and the Bioresource Database, but also imported data from public databases, such as Ensembl, MGI and biomedical ontologies. Our integrated database has been implemented on the infrastructure of publication medium for databases, termed SciNetS/SciNeS, or the Scientists'''' Networking System, where the data and metadata are structured as a semantic web and are downloadable in various standardized formats. The top-level ontology-based implementation of mammal-related data directly integrates the representative knowledge and individual data records in existing databases to ensure advanced cross-database searches and reduced unevenness of the data management operations. Through the development of this database, we propose a novel methodology for the development of standardized comprehensive management of heterogeneous data sets in multiple databases to improve the sustainability, accessibility, utility and publicity of the data of biomedical information.
Proper citation: RIKEN integrated database of mammals (RRID:SCR_006890) Copy
http://tulane.edu/som/regenmed/services/index.cfm
The Stem Cell Research and Regenerative Medicine''s Tissue Culture Core provides cells for research use within the department, as well as for distribution to other facilities. The core obtains hMSCs from bone marrow donor samples and expands these cells for research use. The hMSC''s are also characterized for bone, fat and cartilage differentiation, and are stored on site for use. The Tissue Culture Core also handles the expansion and characterization of mouse and rat MSC''s. The animal cells are cultured in a separate area, and never interact with human derived cells. We also have a supply of hMSC''s marked with GFP+, Mito Red and Mito Blue available.
Proper citation: Tulane Stem Cell Research and Regenerative Medicine Tissue Culture Core (RRID:SCR_007342) Copy
Freely accessible phenotype-centered database with integrated analysis and visualization tools. It combines diverse data sets from multiple species and experiment types, and allows data sharing across collaborative groups or to public users. It was conceived of as a tool for the integration of biological functions based on the molecular processes that subserved them. From these data, an empirically derived ontology may one day be inferred. Users have found the system valuable for a wide range of applications in the arena of functional genomic data integration.
Proper citation: Gene Weaver (RRID:SCR_003009) Copy
http://burgundy.cmmt.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/RAVEN/a?rm=home
Tool to search for putative regulatory genetic variation in your favorite gene. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) (from dbSNP and user defined) are analyzed for overlap with potential transcription factor binding sites (TFBS) and phylogenetic footprinting using UCSC phastCons scores from multiple alignments of 8 vertebrate genomes., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.
Proper citation: RAVEN (RRID:SCR_001937) Copy
http://amp.pharm.mssm.edu/lib/chea.jsp
Data analysis service for gene-list enrichment analysis against a manual database. It allows users to input lists of mammalian gene symbols for which the program computes over-representation of transcription factor targets from the ChIP-X database. The database integrates interaction data from ChIP-chip, ChIP-seq, ChIP-PET and DamID studies and contains 189,933 interactions, manually extracted from 87 publications, describing the binding of 92 transcription factors to 31,932 target genes.
Proper citation: ChEA (RRID:SCR_005403) Copy
http://smd.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/source/sourceSearch
SOURCE compiles information from several publicly accessible databases, including UniGene, dbEST, UniProt Knowledgebase, GeneMap99, RHdb, GeneCards and LocusLink. GO terms associated with LocusLink entries appear in SOURCE. The mission of SOURCE is to provide a unique scientific resource that pools publicly available data commonly sought after for any clone, GenBank accession number, or gene. SOURCE is specifically designed to facilitate the analysis of large sets of data that biologists can now produce using genome-scale experimental approaches Platform: Online tool
Proper citation: SOURCE (RRID:SCR_005799) Copy
http://www.ideal.force.cs.is.nagoya-u.ac.jp/IDEAL/
IDEAL, Intrinsically Disordered proteins with Extensive Annotations and Literature, is a collection of knowledge on experimentally verified intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) or intrinsically disordered regions (IDRs). IDEAL contains manually curated annotations on IDPs in locations, structures, and functional sites such as protein binding regions and posttranslational modification sites together with references and structural domain assignments. Protean segment One of the unique phenomena seen in IDPs is so-called the coupled folding and binding, where a short flexible segment can bind to its binding partner with forming a specific structure to act as a molecular recognition element. IDEAL explicitly annotates these regions as protean segment (ProS) when unstructured and structured information are both available in the region. Access to the data All the entries are tabulated in the list and individual entries can be retrieved by using the search tool at the upper-right corner in this page. IDEAL also provides the BLAST search, which can find homologs in IDEAL. All the information in IDEAL can be downloaded in the XML file.
Proper citation: IDEAL - Intrinsically Disordered proteins with Extensive Annotations and Literature (RRID:SCR_006027) Copy
Database of histopathology photomicrographs and macroscopic images derived from mutant or genetically manipulated mice. The database currently holds more than 1000 images of lesions from mutant mice and their inbred backgrounds and further images are being added continuously. Images can be retrieved by searching for specific lesions or class of lesion, by genetic locus, or by a wide set of parameters shown on the Advanced Search Interface. Its two key aims are: * To provide a searchable database of histopathology images derived from experimental manipulation of the mouse genome or experiments conducted on genetically manipulated mice. * A reference / didactic resource covering all aspects of mouse pathology Lesions are described according to the Pathbase pathology ontology developed by the Pathbase European Consortium, and are available at the site or on the Gene Ontology Consortium site - OBO. As this is a community resource, they encourage everyone to upload their own images, contribute comments to images and send them their feedback. Please feel free to use any of the SOAP/WSDL web services. (under development)
Proper citation: Pathbase (RRID:SCR_006141) Copy
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