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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://pubsearch.stanford.edu/
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVCE, documented September 2, 2016. PubSearch is a web-based literature curation tool, allowing curators to search and annotate genes to keywords from articles. It has a simple mySQL database backend and uses a set of Java Servlets and JSPs for querying, modifying, and adding gene, gene-annotation, and literature information. PubSearch can be downloaded from GMOD. Platform: Online tool, Windows compatible, Mac OS X compatible, Linux compatible, Unix compatible
Proper citation: PubSearch (RRID:SCR_005830) Copy
http://oligogenome.stanford.edu/
The Stanford Human OligoGenome Project hosts a database of capture oligonucleotides for conducting high-throughput targeted resequencing of the human genome. This set of capture oligonucleotides covers over 92% of the human genome for build 37 / hg19 and over 99% of the coding regions defined by the Consensus Coding Sequence (CCDS). The capture reaction uses a highly multiplexed approach for selectively circularizing and capturing multiple genomic regions using the in-solution method developed in Natsoulis et al, PLoS One 2011. Combined pools of capture oligonucleotides selectively circularize the genomic DNA target, followed by specific PCR amplification of regions of interest using a universal primer pair common to all of the capture oligonucleotides. Unlike multiplexed PCR methods, selective genomic circularization is capable of efficiently amplifying hundreds of genomic regions simultaneously in multiplex without requiring extensive PCR optimization or producing unwanted side reaction products. Benefits of the selective genomic circularization method are the relative robustness of the technique and low costs of synthesizing standard capture oligonucleotide for selecting genomic targets.
Proper citation: OligoGenome (RRID:SCR_006025) Copy
A comprehensive encyclopedia of genomic functional elements in the model organisms C. elegans and D. melanogaster. modENCODE is run as a Research Network and the consortium is formed by 11 primary projects, divided between worm and fly, spanning the domains of gene structure, mRNA and ncRNA expression profiling, transcription factor binding sites, histone modifications and replacement, chromatin structure, DNA replication initiation and timing, and copy number variation. The raw and interpreted data from this project is vetted by a data coordinating center (DCC) to ensure consistency and completeness. The entire modENCODE data corpus is now available on the Amazon Web Services EC2 cloud. What this means is that virtual machines and virtual compute clusters that you run within the EC2 cloud can mount the modENCODE data set in whole or in part. Your software can run analyses against the data files directly without experiencing the long waits and logistics associated with copying the datasets over to your local hardware. You may also view the data using GBrowse, Dataset Search, or download the data via FTP, as well as download pre-release datasets.
Proper citation: modENCODE (RRID:SCR_006206) Copy
A clustering and visualization tool that enables the interactive exploration of genome-wide data, with a specialization in epigenomics data. Spark is also available as a service within the Epigenome toolset of the Genboree Workbench. The approach utilizes data clusters as a high-level visual guide and supports interactive inspection of individual regions within each cluster. The cluster view links to gene ontology analysis tools and the detailed region view connects to existing genome browser displays taking advantage of their wealth of annotation and functionality.
Proper citation: Spark (RRID:SCR_006207) Copy
PhenomeNet is a cross-species phenotype similarity network. It contains the experimentally observed phenotypes of multiple species as well as the phenotypes of human diseases. PhenomeNet provides a measure of phenotypic similarity between the phenotypes it contains. The latest release (from 22 June 2012) contains 124,730 complex phenotype nodes taken from the yeast, fish, worm, fly, rat, slime mold and mouse model organism databases as well as human disease phenotypes from OMIM and OrphaNet. The network is a complete graph in which edge weights represent the degree of phenotypic similarity. Phenotypic similarity can be used to identify and prioritize candidate disease genes, find genes participating in the same pathway and orthologous genes between species. To compute phenotypic similarity between two sets of phenotypes, we use a weighted Jaccard index. First, phenotype ontologies are used to infer all the implications of a phenotype observation using several phenotype ontologies. As a second step, the information content of each phenotype is computed and used as a weight in the Jaccard index. Phenotypic similarity is useful in several ways. Phenotypic similarity between a phenotype resulting from a genetic mutation and a disease can be used to suggest candidate genes for a disease. Phenotypic similarity can also identify genes in a same pathway or orthologous genes. PhenomeNet uses the axioms in multiple species-dependent phenotype ontologies to infer equivalent and related phenotypes across species. For this purpose, phenotype ontologies and phenotype annotations are integrated in a single ontology, and automated reasoning is used to infer equivalences. Specifically, for every phenotype, PhenomeNet infers the related mammalian phenotype and uses the Mammalian Phenotype Ontology for computing phenotypic similarity. Tools: * PhenomeBLAST - A tool for cross-species alignments of phenotypes * PhenomeDrug - method for drug-repurposing
Proper citation: phenomeNET (RRID:SCR_006165) Copy
http://trans.nih.gov/bmap/index.htm
The Brain Molecular Anatomy Project is a trans-NIH project aimed at understanding gene expression and function in the nervous system. BMAP has two major scientific goals: # Gene discovery: to catalog of all the genes expressed in the nervous system, under both normal and abnormal conditions. # Gene expression analysis: to monitor gene expression patterns in the nervous system as a function of cell type, anatomical location, developmental stage, and physiological state, and thus gain insight into gene function. In pursuit of these goals, BMAP has launched several initiatives to provide resources and funding opportunities for the scientific community. These include several Requests for Applications and Requests for Proposals, descriptions of which can be found in this Web site. BMAP is also in the process of establishing physical and electronic resources for the community, including repositories of cDNA clones for nervous system genes, and databases of gene expression information for the nervous system. Most of the BMAP initiatives so far have focused on the mouse as a model species because of the ease of experimental and genetic manipulation of this organism, and because many models of human disease are available in the mouse. However, research in humans, other mammalian species, non-mammalian vertebrates, and invertebrates is also being funded through BMAP. For the convenience of interested investigators, we have established this Web site as a central information resource, focusing on major NIH-sponsored funding opportunities, initiatives, genomic resources available to the research community, courses and scientific meetings related to BMAP initiatives, and selected reports and publications. When appropriate, we will also post initiatives not directly sponsored by BMAP, but which are deemed relevant to its goals. Posting decisions are made by the Trans-NIH BMAP Committee
Proper citation: BMAP - Brain Molecular Anatomy Project (RRID:SCR_008852) Copy
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/GeneTests/lab
The GeneTests Web site, a publicly funded medical genetics information resource developed for physicians, other healthcare providers, and researchers, is available at no cost to all interested persons. By providing current, authoritative information on genetic testing and its use in diagnosis, management, and genetic counseling, GeneTests promotes the appropriate use of genetic services in patient care and personal decision making. At This Site: * GeneReviews: Expert-authored peer-reviewed disease descriptions * Laboratory Directory: International directory of genetic testing laboratories * Clinic Directory: International directory of genetics and prenatal diagnosis clinics * Educational Materials: Illustrated glossary, information on genetic services, PowerPoint presentations, annotated Internet resources We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health information.
Proper citation: GeneTests (RRID:SCR_010725) Copy
Only worldwide authority that provides standardized nomenclature, i.e. gene names and symbols (short form abbreviations), for all known human genes, and stores all approved symbols in the HGNC database. Approved human gene nomenclature. Database of gene symbols and names. Manually curated genes into groups based on shared characteristics such as homology, function or phenotype. Data for protein-coding genes, pseudogenes and non-coding RNAs.
Proper citation: HGNC (RRID:SCR_002827) Copy
Central data repository for nematode biology including complete genomic sequence, gene predictions and orthology assignments from range of related nematodes.Data concerning genetics, genomics and biology of C. elegans and related nematodes. Derived from initial ACeDB database of C. elegans genetic and sequence information, WormBase includes genomic, anatomical and functional information of C. elegans, other Caenorhabditis species and other nematodes. Maintains public FTP site where researchers can find many commonly requested files and datasets, WormBase software and prepackaged databases.
Proper citation: WormBase (RRID:SCR_003098) 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
Organization that provides biomedical researchers with online tools and a web portal enabling them to access, review, and integrate disparate ontological resources in all aspects of biomedical investigation and clinical practice. A major focus of the work involves the use of biomedical ontologies to aid in the management and analysis of data derived from complex experiments.
Proper citation: National Center for Biomedical Ontology (RRID:SCR_003304) Copy
http://code.google.com/p/amap-align/
Source code that performs multiple alignment of peptidic sequences. It utilizes posterior decoding and a sequence-annealing alignment, instead of the traditional progressive alignment method.
Proper citation: AMAP (RRID:SCR_015969) Copy
https://github.com/lh3/fermi-lite
Standalone C library as well as a command-line tool for assembling Illumina short reads in small regions. It is an overlap-based assembler used in sequencing to retain heterozygous events and to assemble diploid regions for the purpose of variant calling.
Proper citation: fermi-lite (RRID:SCR_016112) Copy
http://omics.informatics.indiana.edu/AbundantOTU/
Software tool for analysis of large 16S rRNA pyrosequences by using a consensus alignment algorithm, utilizing the sequence redundancy of abundant species in the pyrosequence dataset.
Proper citation: AbundantOTU+ (RRID:SCR_016527) Copy
Project to create network based understanding of biology by cataloging changes in gene expression and other cellular processes when cells are exposed to genetic and environmental stressors. Program to develop therapies that might restore pathways and networks to their normal states. Has LINCS Data Coordination and Integration Center and six Data and Signature Generation Centers: Drug Toxicity Signature Generation Center, HMS LINCS Center, LINCS Center for Transcriptomics, LINCS Proteomic Characterization Center for Signaling and Epigenetics, MEP LINCS Center, and NeuroLINCS Center.
Proper citation: LINCS Project (RRID:SCR_016486) Copy
https://bitbucket.org/biobakery/biobakery/wiki/Home
Analysis environment and collection of individual software tools to process raw shotgun metagenome or metatranscriptome sequencing data for quantitative microbial community profiling. Used for a metaomics data analysis., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025.
Proper citation: biobakery (RRID:SCR_016596) Copy
http://bioconductor.org/packages/GenomicFeatures/
Software R package for making and manipulating transcript centric annotations. Used to download the genomic locations of the transcripts, exons and cds of a given organism, from either the UCSC Genome Browser or a BioMart database.
Proper citation: GenomicFeatures (RRID:SCR_016960) Copy
Web tool to search multiple public variant databases simultaneously and provide a unified interface to facilitate the search process. Used for integration of human and model organism genetic resources to facilitate functional annotation of the human genome. Used for analysis of human genes and variants by cross-disciplinary integration of records available in public databases to facilitate clinical diagnosis and basic research.
Proper citation: MARRVEL (RRID:SCR_016871) Copy
https://software.broadinstitute.org/software/discovar/blog/
Software tool for variant calling with reference and de novo assembly of genomes. The heart of DISCOVAR is a de novo genome assembler which can generate de novo assemblies for both large and small genomes.
Proper citation: Discovar assembler (RRID:SCR_016755) Copy
https://github.com/PathwayAnalysisPlatform/PathwayMatcher
Software tool for multi omics pathway mapping and proteoform network generation. Open source software writen in Java to search for pathways related to a list of proteins in Reactome.
Proper citation: PathwayMatcher (RRID:SCR_016759) Copy
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