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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.genmapp.org/help_v2/UsingMAPPFinder.htm
MAPPFinder is an accessory program for GenMAPP. This program allows users to query any existing GenMAPP Expression Dataset Criterion against GO gene associations and GenMAPP MAPPs (microarray pathway profiles). The resulting analysis provides the user with results that can be viewed directly upon the Gene Ontology hierarchy and within GenMAPP, by selecting terms or MAPPs of interest. Platform: Windows compatible
Proper citation: MAPPFinder (RRID:SCR_005791) Copy
Web-service providing access to database that brings together information from broad range of resources. Web application for functional annotation and statistical hypothesis testing. Provides tools for analysis of genomic and microarray data. Collection of tools include Bibliographic Information,Databases,Gene Annotation,Gene Regulation, Microarray,Proteins,Sequence Manipulation - Nucleic Acids,Sequence Manipulation - Protein, Systems Biology.
Proper citation: GeneTools (RRID:SCR_005663) Copy
http://g2im.u-clermont1.fr/serimour/goarrays.html
GOArray is a Perl program which inputs a lists of genes annotated as of interest (GOI) or not, and determines if any associated GO terms have an overrepresentation of GOI. A permutation test is optionally used to assess confidence in the results. Output includes multiple visualizations and supplementary information and, for future reference, a summary of the statistical methods used. Platform: Windows compatible, Mac OS X compatible, Linux compatible, Unix compatible
Proper citation: GOArray (RRID:SCR_005785) Copy
http://genenet2.uthsc.edu/geneinfoviz/search.php
GeneInfoViz is a web based tool for batch retrieval of gene function information, visualization of GO structure and construction of gene relation networks. It takes a input list of genes in the form of LocusLink ID, UniGeneID, gene symbol, or accession number and returns their functional genomic information. Based on the GO annotations of the given genes, GeneInfoViz allows users to visualize these genes in the DAG structure of GO, and construct a gene relation network at a selected level of the DAG. Platform: Online tool
Proper citation: GeneInfoViz (RRID:SCR_005680) Copy
TrED is a database of Trichophyton rubrum, a fungus. The database contains strains, cDNA libraries, pathways, and microarray data as well as a directed set of literature. Trichophyton rubrum is the most common dermatophyte species and the most frequent cause of fungal skin infections in humans worldwide. It''''s a major concern because feet and nail infections caused by this organism is extremely difficult to cure. A large set of expression data including expressed sequence tags (ESTs) and transcriptional profiles of this important fungal pathogen are now available. Careful analysis of these data can give valuable information about potential virulence factors, antigens and novel metabolic pathways. We intend to create an integrated database TrED to facilitate the study of dermatophytes, and enhance the development of effective diagnostic and treatment strategies. All publicly available ESTs and expression profiles of T. rubrum during conidial germination in time-course experiments and challenged with antifungal agents are deposited in the database. In addition, comparative genomics hybridization results of 22 dermatophytic fungi strains from three genera, Trichophyton, Microsporum and Epidermophyton, are also included. ESTs are clustered and assembled to elongate the sequence length and abate redundancy. TrED provides functional analysis based on GenBank, Pfam, and KOG databases, along with KEGG pathway and GO vocabulary. It is integrated with a suite of custom web-based tools that facilitate querying and retrieving various EST properties, visualization and comparison of transcriptional profiles, and sequence-similarity searching by BLAST. TrED is built upon a relational database, with a web interface offering analytic functions, to provide integrated access to various expression data of T. rubrum and comparative results of dermatophytes. It is devoted to be a comprehensive resource and platform to assist functional genomic studies in dermatophytes.
Proper citation: TrED (RRID:SCR_005869) Copy
http://mor.nlm.nih.gov/perl/gennav.pl
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on July 31,2025. GenNav searches GO terms and annotated gene products, and provides a graphical display of a term's position in the GO DAG.
Proper citation: GenNav (RRID:SCR_000147) Copy
http://dbserv2.informatik.uni-leipzig.de:8080/onex/
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 6,2023. Web-based application that integrates versions of 16 life science ontologies including the Gene Ontology, NCI Thesaurus and selected OBO ontologies with data leading back to 2002 in a common repository to explore ontology changes. It allows to study and apply the evolution of these integrated ontologies on three different levels. It provides global ontology evolution statistics and ontology-specific evolution trends for concepts and relationships and it allows the migration of annotations in case a new ontology version was released
Proper citation: OnEx - Ontology Evolution Explorer (RRID:SCR_000602) Copy
http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/categoryCompare.html
A software package for meta-analysis of high-throughput experiments using feature annotations. It calculates significant annotations (categories) in each of two (or more) feature (i.e. gene) lists, determines the overlap between the annotations, and returns graphical and tabular data about the significant annotations and which combinations of feature lists the annotations were found to be significant. Interactive exploration is facilitated through the use of RCytoscape (heavily suggested).
Proper citation: categoryCompare (RRID:SCR_001223) Copy
http://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/globaltest.html
A software package that tests groups of covariates (or features) for association with a response variable. The package implements the test with diagnostic plots and multiple testing utilities, along with several functions to facilitate the use of this test for gene set testing of GO and KEGG terms.
Proper citation: globaltest (RRID:SCR_001256) Copy
https://scicrunch.org/resolver/SCR_002250
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented Jul 19, 2024. Metadatabase manually curated that provides web accessible tools related to genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics and metabolomics. Used as informative directory for multi-omic data analysis.
Proper citation: OMICtools (RRID:SCR_002250) Copy
http://bioportal.bioontology.org/
Open repository of biomedical ontologies that provides access via Web browsers and Web services to ontologies. It supports ontologies in OBO format, OWL, RDF, Rich Release Format (RRF), Protege frames, and LexGrid XML. Functionality includes the ability to browse, search and visualize ontologies as well as to comment on, and create mappings for ontologies. Any registered user can submit an ontology. The NCBO Annotator and NCBO Resource Index can also be accessed via BioPortal. Additional features: * Add Reviews: rate the ontology according to several criteria and describe your experience using the ontology. * Add Mappings: submit point-to-point mappings or upload bulk mappings created with external tools. Notification of new Mappings is RSS-enabled and Mappings can be browsed via BioPortal and accessed via Web services. * NCBO Annotator: Tool that tags free text with ontology terms. NCBO uses the Annotator to generate ontology annotations, creating an ontology index of these resources accessible via the NCBO Resource Index. The Annotator can be accessed through BioPortal or directly as a Web service. The annotation workflow is based on syntactic concept recognition (using the preferred name and synonyms for terms) and on a set of semantic expansion algorithms that leverage the ontology structure (e.g., is_a relations). * NCBO Resource Index: The NCBO Resource Index is a system for ontology based annotation and indexing of biomedical data; the key functionality of this system is to enable users to locate biomedical data linked via ontology terms. A set of annotations is generated automatically, using the NCBO Annotator, and presented in BioPortal. This service uses a concept recognizer (developed by the National Center for Integrative Biomedical Informatics, University of Michigan) to produce a set of annotations and expand them using ontology is_a relations. * Web services: Documentation on all Web services and example code is available at: BioPortal Web services.
Proper citation: BioPortal (RRID:SCR_002713) Copy
Generate gene trap insertions using mutagenic polyA trap vectors, followed by sequence tagging to develop a library of mutagenized ES cells freely available to the scientific community. This library is searchable by sequence or key word searches including gene name or symbol, chromosome location, or Gene Ontology (GO) terms. In addition,they offer a custom email alert service in which researchers are able to submit search criteria. Researchers will receive automated e-mail notification of matching gene trap clones as they are entered into the library and database. The resource features the use of complementary second and third generation polyA trap vectors developed by the Stanford lab and the laboratory of Professor Yasumasa Ishida of the Nara Institute of Science and Technology (NAIST) in Japan to mutagenize murine embryonic stem (ES) cells. CMHD gene trap clones are distributed by the Canadian Mouse Mutant Repository(CMMR). Information about ordering, services, and pricing can be found on their web site (http://www.cmmr.ca/services/index.html)., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on January 15,2026.
Proper citation: Centre for Modeling Human Disease Gene Trap Resource (RRID:SCR_002785) Copy
http://gemdock.life.nctu.edu.tw/3D-Interologs
Database of physical protein-protein interactions across multiple genomes. Based on 3D-domain interolog mapping and a scoring function, protein-protein interactions are inferred by using three-dimensional (3D) structure heterodimers to search the UniProt database. For a query protein, the database utilizes BLAST to identify homologous proteins and the interacting partners from multiple species. Based on the scoring function and structure complexes, it provides the statistic significances, the interacting models (e.g. hydrogen bonds and conserved amino acids), and functional annotations of interacting partners of a query protein. The identification of orthologous proteins of multiple species allows the study of protein-protein evolution, protein functions, and cross-referencing of proteins.
Proper citation: 3D-Interologs (RRID:SCR_003101) Copy
http://genecruiser.broadinstitute.org/genecruiser3/
A web service and web application for the annotation of microarray data providing integrated access to genomic information freely available from public data sources.
Proper citation: GeneCruiser (RRID:SCR_003153) Copy
BioPerl is a community effort to produce Perl code which is useful in biology. This toolkit of perl modules is useful in building bioinformatics solutions in Perl. It is built in an object-oriented manner so that many modules depend on each other to achieve a task. The collection of modules in the bioperl-live repository consist of the core of the functionality of bioperl. Additionally auxiliary modules for creating graphical interfaces (bioperl-gui), persistent storage in RDMBS (bioperl-db), running and parsing the results from hundreds of bioinformatics applications (Run package), software to automate bioinformatic analyses (bioperl-pipeline) are all available as Git modules in our repository. The BioPerl toolkit provides a library of hundreds of routines for processing sequence, annotation, alignment, and sequence analysis reports. It often serves as a bridge between different computational biology applications assisting the user to construct analysis pipelines. This chapter illustrates how BioPerl facilitates tasks such as writing scripts summarizing information from BLAST reports or extracting key annotation details from a GenBank sequence record. BioPerl includes modules written by Sohel Merchant of the GO Consortium for parsing and manipulating OBO ontologies. Platform: Windows compatible, Mac OS X compatible, Linux compatible, Unix compatible
Proper citation: BioPerl (RRID:SCR_002989) Copy
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~jernst/stem/
The Short Time-series Expression Miner (STEM) is a Java program for clustering, comparing, and visualizing short time series gene expression data from microarray experiments (~8 time points or fewer). STEM allows researchers to identify significant temporal expression profiles and the genes associated with these profiles and to compare the behavior of these genes across multiple conditions. STEM is fully integrated with the Gene Ontology (GO) database supporting GO category gene enrichment analyses for sets of genes having the same temporal expression pattern. STEM also supports the ability to easily determine and visualize the behavior of genes belonging to a given GO category or user defined gene set, identifying which temporal expression profiles were enriched for these genes. (Note: While STEM is designed primarily to analyze data from short time course experiments it can be used to analyze data from any small set of experiments which can naturally be ordered sequentially including dose response experiments.) Platform: Windows compatible, Mac OS X compatible, Linux compatible, Unix compatible
Proper citation: Short Time-series Expression Miner (STEM) (RRID:SCR_005016) Copy
http://www.bumc.bu.edu/cardiovascularproteomics/cpctools/strap/
Software program that automatically annotates a protein list with information that helps in the meaningful interpretation of data from mass spectrometry and other techniques. It takes protein lists as input, in the form of plain text files, protXML files (usually from the TPP), or Dat files from MASCOT search results. From this, it generates protein annotation tables, and a variety of GO charts to aid individual and differential analysis of proteomics data. It downloads information from mainly the Uniprot and EBI QuickGO databases. STRAP requires Windows XP or higher with at least version 3.5 of the Microsoft .NET Framework installed. Platform: Windows compatible
Proper citation: STRAP (RRID:SCR_005675) Copy
http://www.cs.ualberta.ca/~bioinfo/PA/GOSUB/
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on June 30, 2015. Refer to Proteome Analyst 3.0. Subcellular Localization and GO General Molecular Function predictions for many model organism proteomes using Protein Analyst, with a very high coverage rate. When users blast their proteins against the database of results, they will not only be shown blast homologs from the model organisms, but also the Subcellular Localization and GO General Molecular Function predictions as well.
Proper citation: Proteome Analyst PA-GOSUB (RRID:SCR_008234) Copy
http://david.abcc.ncifcrf.gov/content.jsp?file=/ease/ease1.htm&type=1
Windows(c) desktop software application, customizable and standalone, that facilitates the biological interpretation of gene lists derived from the results of microarray, proteomic, and SAGE experiments. Provides statistical methods for discovering enriched biological themes within gene lists, generates gene annotation tables, and enables automated linking to online analysis tools. Offers statistical models to deal with multi-test comparison problem. Platform: Windows compatible
Proper citation: EASE: the Expression Analysis Systematic Explorer (RRID:SCR_013361) Copy
https://bioconductor.org/packages/biomaRt/
Software package that integrates BioMart data resources with data analysis software in Bioconductor. Can annotate range of gene or gene product identifiers including Entrez Gene and Affymetrix probe identifiers with information such as gene symbol, chromosomal coordinates, Gene Ontology and OMIM annotation. Enables retrieval of genomic sequences and single nucleotide polymorphism information, which can be used in data analysis.
Proper citation: biomaRt (RRID:SCR_019214) Copy
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