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http://www.jcvi.org/cgi-bin/tigrfams/index.cgi
Consists curated multiple sequence alignments, Hidden Markov Models (HMMs) for protein sequence classification, and associated information designed to support automated annotation of (mostly prokaryotic) proteins. Starting with release 10.0, TIGRFAMs models use HMMER3, which provides excellent search speed as well as exquisite search sensitivity. See the "TIGRFAMs Complete Listing" page to review the accession, protein name, model type, and EC number (if assigned) of all models. TIGRFAMs is a member database in InterPro. The HMM libraries and supporting files are available to download and use for free from our FTP site.
Proper citation: TIGRFAMS (RRID:SCR_005493) Copy
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gtr/
Central location for voluntary submission of genetic test information by providers including the test''s purpose, methodology, validity, evidence of the test''s usefulness, and laboratory contacts and credentials. GTR aims to advance the public health and research into the genetic basis of health and disease. GTR is accepting registration of clinical tests for Mendelian disorders, complex tests and arrays, and pharmacogenetic tests. These tests may include multiple methods and may include multiple major method categories such as biochemical, cytogenetic, and molecular tests. GTR is not currently accepting registration of tests for somatic disorders, research tests or direct-to-consumer tests.
Proper citation: Genetic Testing Registry (RRID:SCR_005565) Copy
The Roth Laboratory is designing and interpreting large-scale experiments to understand pathway structure and its relationship to phenotype and human disease. Software for research focused on a specific research goal is available. Current experimental interests: * Exploiting parallel sequencing technology to phenotype all pairwise gene deletion combinations in S. cerevisiae, with initial application to genes involved in transcription. * Generation of S. cerevisiae strains carrying dozens of chosen targeted deletions, with initial application to delete all ABC transporters imparting multidrug resistance. * Targeted insertion of gene sets encoding entire human pathways into S. cerevisiae, with initial application to genes involved in drug metabolism. Current computational interests: * Systematic analysis of genetic interaction to reveal redundant systems and order of action in genetic pathways * Integrating large-scale studies - including phenotype, genetic epistasis, protein-protein and transcription-regulatory interactions and sequence patterns - to quantitatively assign function to genes and guide experimentation and disease association studies. * Alternative splicing and its relationship to protein interaction networks.
Proper citation: Roth Laboratory (RRID:SCR_005711) Copy
Data analysis service to predict the function of your favorite genes and gene sets. Indexing 1,421 association networks containing 266,984,699 interactions mapped to 155,238 genes from 7 organisms. GeneMANIA interaction networks are available for download in plain text format. GeneMANIA finds other genes that are related to a set of input genes, using a very large set of functional association data. Association data include protein and genetic interactions, pathways, co-expression, co-localization and protein domain similarity. You can use GeneMANIA to find new members of a pathway or complex, find additional genes you may have missed in your screen or find new genes with a specific function, such as protein kinases. Your question is defined by the set of genes you input. If members of your gene list make up a protein complex, GeneMANIA will return more potential members of the protein complex. If you enter a gene list, GeneMANIA will return connections between your genes, within the selected datasets. GeneMANIA suggests annotations for genes based on Gene Ontology term enrichment of highly interacting genes with the gene of interest. GeneMANIA is also a gene recommendation system. GeneMANIA is also accessible via a Cytoscape plugin, designed for power users. Platform: Online tool, Windows compatible, Mac OS X compatible, Linux compatible, Unix compatible
Proper citation: GeneMANIA (RRID:SCR_005709) Copy
The research of the group concentrates on the molecular biology of Gram-positive bacteria, with Bacillus subtilis and Lactococcus lactis as the main model organisms. A number of important (human) pathogens are also investigated: Bacillus cereus, Streptococcus pneumoniae and Enterococcus faecalis. The nature of the research is both fundamental and application-oriented. Transcript- and protein profiling by high-throughput technologies such as DNA microarrays and proteomics tools are being used. The very large data sets generated are analyzed by employing existing and novel bioinformatics tools. Major lines of research are in the field of functional genomics of these organisms, using systems- and synthetic biology approaches.
Proper citation: MolGen (RRID:SCR_005700) Copy
http://agbase.msstate.edu/cgi-bin/tools/goprofiler_select.pl
Service that provides a summary of GO annotations available for each species. The user provides a taxon id and GOProfiler displays the number of GO associations and the number of annotated proteins for that species. The results are listed by evidence code and a separate list of unannotated proteins is also provided.
Proper citation: GOProfiler (RRID:SCR_005683) Copy
http://www.pandora.cs.huji.ac.il/
With PANDORA, you can search for any non-uniform sets of proteins and detect subsets of proteins that share unique biological properties and the intersections of such sets. PANDORA supports GO annotations as well as additional keywords (from UniProt Knowledgebase, InterPro, ENZYME, SCOP etc). It is also integrated into the ProtoNet system, thus allowing testing of thousands of automatically generated protein families. Note that PANDORA replaces the ProtoGO browser developed by the same group. Platform: Online tool
Proper citation: Pandora - Protein ANnotation Diagram ORiented Analysis (RRID:SCR_005686) Copy
http://mcbc.usm.edu/gofetcher/
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on June 29, 2012. We developed a web application, GOfetcher, with a very comprehensive search facility for the GO project and a variety of output formats for the results. GOfetcher has three different levels for searching the GO: Quick Search, Advanced Search, and Upload Files for searching. The application includes a unique search option which generates gene information given a nucleotide or protein accession number which can then be used in generating gene ontology information. The output data in GOfetcher can be saved into several different formats; including spreadsheet, comma-separated values, and the Extensible Markup Language (XML) format. Platform: Online tool
Proper citation: GOfetcher (RRID:SCR_005681) Copy
http://www.compbio.dundee.ac.uk/downloads/oxbench/
A suite of programs aimed at developers of alignment methods rather than end-users to assess the accuracy of multiple sequence alignment methods. It includes a reference database of protein multiple sequence alignments that were generated by consideration of protein three-dimensional structure.
Proper citation: OXBench (RRID:SCR_005591) Copy
http://www.garban.org/garban/home.php
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on July 12, 2012. GARBAN is a tool for analysis and rapid functional annotation of data arising from cDNA microarrays and proteomics techniques. GARBAN has been implemented with bioinformatic tools to rapidly compare, classify, and graphically represent multiple sets of data (genes/ESTs, or proteins), with the specific aim of facilitating the identification of molecular markers in pathological and pharmacological studies. GARBAN has links to the major genomic and proteomic databases (Ensembl, GeneBank, UniProt Knowledgebase, InterPro, etc.), and follows the criteria of the Gene Ontology Consortium (GO) for ontological classifications. Source may be shared: e-mail garban (at) ceit.es. Platform: Online tool
Proper citation: GARBAN (RRID:SCR_005778) Copy
http://www.ebi.ac.uk/Tools/pfa/iprscan/
Software package for functional analysis of sequences by classifying them into families and predicting presence of domains and sites. Scans sequences against InterPro's signatures. Characterizes nucleotide or protein function by matching it with models from several different databases. Used in large scale analysis of whole proteomes, genomes and metagenomes. Available as Web based version and standalone Perl version and SOAP Web Service.
Proper citation: InterProScan (RRID:SCR_005829) Copy
http://www.ebi.ac.uk/webservices/whatizit/info.jsf
A text processing system that allows you to do textmining tasks on text. It is great at identifying molecular biology terms and linking them to publicly available databases. Whatizit is also a Medline abstracts retrieval/search engine. Instead of providing the text by Copy&Paste, you can launch a Medline search. The abstracts that match your search criteria are retrieved and processed by a pipeline of your choice. Whatizit is also available as 1) a webservice and as 2) a streamed servlet. The webservice allows you to enrich content within your website in a similar way as in the wikipedia. The streamed servlet allows you to process large amounts of text.
Proper citation: Whatizit (RRID:SCR_005824) Copy
http://crdd.osdd.net/raghava/ccpdb/
ccPDB (Compilation and Creation of datasets from PDB) is designed to provide service to scientific community working in the field of function or structure annoation of proteins. This database of datasets is based on Protein Data Bank (PDB), where all datasets were derived from PDB. ccPDB have four modules; i) compilation of datasets, ii) creation of datasets, iii) web services and iv) Important links. * Compilation of Datasets: Datasets at ccPDB can be classified in two categories, i) datasets collected from literature and ii) datasets compiled from PDB. We are in process of collecting PDB datasetsfrom literature and maintaining at ccPDB. We are also requesting community to suggest datasets. In addition, we generate datasets from PDB, these datasets were generated using commonly used standard protocols like non-redundant chains, structures solved at high resolution. * Creation of datasets: This module developed for creating customized datasets where user can create a dataset using his/her conditions from PDB. This module will be useful for those users who wish to create a new dataset as per ones requirement. This module have six steps, which are described in help page. * Web Services: We integrated following web services in ccPDB; i) Analyze of PDB ID service allows user to submit their PDB on around 40 servers from single point, ii) BLAST search allows user to perform BLAST search of their protein against PDB, iii) Structural information service is designed for annotating a protein structure from PDB ID, iv) Search in PDB facilitate user in searching structures in PDB, v)Generate patterns service facility to generate different types of patterns required for machine learning techniques and vi) Download useful information allows user to download various types of information for a given set of proteins (PDB IDs). * Important Links: One of major objectives of this web site is to provide links to web servers related to functional annotation of proteins. In first phase we have collected and compiled these links in different categories. In future attempt will be made to collect as many links as possible.
Proper citation: ccPDB - Compilation and Creation of datasets from PDB (RRID:SCR_005870) Copy
http://inparanoid.sbc.su.se/cgi-bin/index.cgi
Collection of pairwise comparisons between 100 whole genomes generated by a fully automatic method for finding orthologs and in-paralogs between TWO species. Ortholog clusters in the InParanoid are seeded with a two-way best pairwise match, after which an algorithm for adding in-paralogs is applied. The method bypasses multiple alignments and phylogenetic trees, which can be slow and error-prone steps in classical ortholog detection. Still, it robustly detects complex orthologous relationships and assigns confidence values for in-paralogs. The original data sets can be downloaded.
Proper citation: InParanoid: Eukaryotic Ortholog Groups (RRID:SCR_006801) Copy
Multi-organism, publicly accessible compendium of peptides identified in a large set of tandem mass spectrometry proteomics experiments. Mass spectrometer output files are collected for human, mouse, yeast, and several other organisms, and searched using the latest search engines and protein sequences. All results of sequence and spectral library searching are subsequently processed through the Trans Proteomic Pipeline to derive a probability of correct identification for all results in a uniform manner to insure a high quality database, along with false discovery rates at the whole atlas level. The raw data, search results, and full builds can be downloaded for other uses. All results of sequence searching are processed through PeptideProphet to derive a probability of correct identification for all results in a uniform manner ensuring a high quality database. All peptides are mapped to Ensembl and can be viewed as custom tracks on the Ensembl genome browser. The long term goal of the project is full annotation of eukaryotic genomes through a thorough validation of expressed proteins. The PeptideAtlas provides a method and a framework to accommodate proteome information coming from high-throughput proteomics technologies. The online database administers experimental data in the public domain. You are encouraged to contribute to the database.
Proper citation: PeptideAtlas (RRID:SCR_006783) Copy
canSAR is an integrated database that brings together biological, chemical, pharmacological (and eventually clinical) data. Its goal is to integrate this data and make it accessible to cancer research scientists from multiple disciplines, in order to help with hypothesis generation in cancer research and support translational research. This cancer research and drug discovery resource was developed to utilize the growing publicly available biological annotation, chemical screening, RNA interference screening, expression, amplification and 3D structural data. Scientists can, in a single place, rapidly identify biological annotation of a target, its structural characterization, expression levels and protein interaction data, as well as suitable cell lines for experiments, potential tool compounds and similarity to known drug targets. canSAR has, from the outset, been completely use-case driven which has dramatically influenced the design of the back-end and the functionality provided through the interfaces. The Web interface provides flexible, multipoint entry into canSAR. This allows easy access to the multidisciplinary data within, including target and compound synopses, bioactivity views and expert tools for chemogenomic, expression and protein interaction network data.
Proper citation: canSAR (RRID:SCR_006794) Copy
Portal to the PSORT family of computer programs for the prediction of protein localization sites in cells, as well as other datasets and resources relevant to localization prediction. The standalone versions are available for download for larger analyses.
Proper citation: Psort (RRID:SCR_007038) Copy
Comprehensive set of protein domain families automatically generated from UniProt Knowledge Database. Automated clustering of homologous domains generated from global comparison of all available protein sequences., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.
Proper citation: ProDom (RRID:SCR_006969) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on August 27, 2019.
Database for those interested in the consequences of Factor VIII genetic variation at the DNA and protein level, it provides access to data on the molecular pathology of haemophilia A. The database presents a review of the structure and function of factor VIII and the molecular genetics of haemophilia A, a real time update of the biostatistics of each parameter in the database, a molecular model of the A1, A2 and A3 domains of the factor VIII protein (based on the crystal structure of caeruloplasmin) and a bulletin board for discussion of issues in the molecular biology of factor VIII. The database is completely updated with easy submission of point mutations, deletions and insertions via e-mail of custom-designed forms. A methods section devoted to mutation detection is available, highlighting issues such as choice of technique and PCR primer sequences. The FVIII structure section now includes a download of a FVIII A domain homology model in Protein Data Bank format and a multiple alignment of the FVIII amino-acid sequences from four species (human, murine, porcine and canine) in addition to the virtual reality simulations, secondary structural data and FVIII animation already available. Finally, to aid navigation across this site, a clickable roadmap of the main features provides easy access to the page desired. Their intention is that continued development and updating of the site shall provide workers in the fields of molecular and structural biology with a one-stop resource site to facilitate FVIII research and education. To submit your mutants to the Haemophilia A Mutation Database email the details. (Refer to Submission Guidelines)
Proper citation: HAMSTeRS - The Haemophilia A Mutation Structure Test and Resource Site (RRID:SCR_006883) Copy
http://sourceforge.net/p/fastsemsim/home/Home/
A package that implements several semantic similarity measures. It is both a library and an end-user application, featuring an intuitive graphical user interface (GUI). It has been implemented with the aim of being fast, expandable, and easy to use. It allows the user to work with the most updated version of GO database and customizable annotation corpora. It provides a set of logically-organized classes that can be easily exploited to both integrate semantic similarity into different analysis pipelines and extend the library with new measures. Platform: Windows compatible, Mac OS X compatible, Linux compatible, Unix compatible
Proper citation: FastSemSim (RRID:SCR_006919) Copy
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