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.
| Resource Name | Proper Citation | Abbreviations | Resource Type |
Description |
Keywords | Resource Relationships | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Racon Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
Racon (RRID:SCR_017642) | software resource, data processing software, software application | Software tool as de novo genome assembly from long uncorrected reads. Used to correct raw contigs generated by rapid assembly methods which do not include consensus step. Supports data produced by Pacific Biosciences and Oxford Nanopore Technologies. | Assembly, de novo, long, uncorrected, read, raw, contig, consensus, step, data, sequence, bio.tools |
is listed by: Debian is listed by: bio.tools is listed by: OMICtools |
Croatian Science Foundation ; Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts ; A*STAR ; Singapore |
DOI:10.1101/068122 | Free, Available for download, Freely available | OMICS_25714, biotools:Racon, BioTools:Racon | https://bio.tools/Racon https://sources.debian.org/src/racon/ |
SCR_017642 | 2026-02-14 02:05:42 | 149 | ||||||
|
TransDecoder Resource Report Resource Website 1000+ mentions |
TransDecoder (RRID:SCR_017647) | software resource, data processing software, software application, standalone software | Software tool to identify candidate coding regions within transcript sequences, such as those generated by de novo RNA-Seq transcript assembly using Trinity, or constructed based on RNA-Seq alignments to genome using Tophat and Cufflinks.Starts from FASTA or GFF file. Can scan and retain open reading frames (ORFs) for homology to known proteins by using BlastP or Pfam search and incorporate results into obtained selection. Predictions can then be visualized by using genome browser such as IGV. | Identify, candidate, coding, region, transcript, sequence, de novo, RNAseq, assembly, alignment, genome, open, reading, frame, homology, protein, bio.tools |
is listed by: OMICtools is listed by: Debian is listed by: bio.tools |
Free, Available for download, Freely available | biotools:transDecoder, OMICS_10852 | https://bio.tools/TransDecoder https://sources.debian.org/src/transdecoder/ https://github.com/TransDecoder/TransDecoder/wiki |
SCR_017647 | , Find Coding Regions Within Transcripts | 2026-02-14 02:05:35 | 1309 | |||||||
|
Recognition of Errors in Assemblies using Paired Reads Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Recognition of Errors in Assemblies using Paired Reads (RRID:SCR_017625) | REAPR | software resource, data processing software, software application | Software tool to identify errors in genome assemblies without need for reference sequence. Can be used in any stage of assembly pipeline to automatically break incorrect scaffolds and flag other errors in assembly for manual inspection. Reports mis-assemblies and other warnings, and produces new broken assembly based on error calls. | Identify, error, genome, assembly, without, reference, sequence, incorrect, scaffold, error |
is listed by: Debian is listed by: OMICtools has parent organization: Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute; Hinxton; United Kingdom |
European Union ; Wellcome Trust ; JSPS KAKENHI |
PMID:23710727 | Free, Available for download, Freely available | OMICS_04068 | https://sources.debian.org/src/reapr/ | SCR_017625 | 2026-02-14 02:05:17 | 2 | |||||
|
ExonerateTransferAnnotation Resource Report Resource Website |
ExonerateTransferAnnotation (RRID:SCR_017557) | software resource, data processing software, software application | Software tool as pipeline to make anntotations using cDNA and CDS sequences. | Exonerate, transfer, annotation, cDNA, CDS, sequence, pipeline, gene | uses: Exonerate | Free, Available for download, Freely available | SCR_017557 | Resource | 2026-02-14 02:05:42 | 0 | |||||||||
|
Augur Resource Report Resource Website 50+ mentions |
Augur (RRID:SCR_023964) | software resource, software toolkit | Software package to track evolution from sequence and serological data. Provides collection of commands which are designed to be composable into larger processing pipelines. | track evolution, sequence, serological data. | is listed by: Debian | Free, Available for download, Freely available | https://sources.debian.org/src/augur/ https://docs.nextstrain.org/projects/augur/en/stable/ |
SCR_023964 | augur | 2026-02-14 02:05:38 | 67 | ||||||||
|
Fastahack Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Fastahack (RRID:SCR_016090) | software resource, software application | Software application for indexing and extracting sequences and subsequences from FASTA files. It will only generate indexes for FASTA files in which the sequences have self-consistent line lengths. | extract, quickly, subsequence, sequence, FASTA, files, generate, index |
is listed by: Debian is listed by: OMICtools |
Free, Available for download | OMICS_20516 | https://packages.debian.org/stretch/fastahack https://sources.debian.org/src/fastahack/ |
SCR_016090 | 2026-02-14 02:06:59 | 1 | ||||||||
|
Fastaq Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Fastaq (RRID:SCR_016091) | software resource, software toolkit | Software application for diverse collection of scripts that perform useful and common FASTA/FASTQ manipulation tasks, such as filtering, merging, splitting, sorting, trimming, search/replace, etc. Input and output files can be gzipped (format is automatically detected) and individual Fastaq commands can be piped together. | diverse, script, collect, filter, merge, split, sort, trim, search, replace, file, single-letter code, nucleotide, sequence, peptide, amino acid, text-based, format |
is listed by: Debian is listed by: OMICtools has parent organization: Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute; Hinxton; United Kingdom |
Free, Available for download, Freely available | OMICS_19987 | https://sources.debian.org/src/fastaq/ | SCR_016091 | 2026-02-14 02:07:22 | 25 | ||||||||
|
Signaling Pathway Database Resource Report Resource Website 50+ mentions |
Signaling Pathway Database (RRID:SCR_008243) | SPAD | data or information resource, database | It is divided to four categories based on extracellular signal molecules (Growth factor, Cytokine, and Hormone) and stress, that initiate the intracellular signaling pathway. SPAD is compiled in order to describe information on interaction between protein and protein, protein and DNA as well as information on sequences of DNA and proteins. There are multiple signal transduction pathways: cascade of information from plasma membrane to nucleus in response to an extracellular stimulus in living organisms. Extracellular signal molecule binds specific intracellular receptor, and initiates the signaling pathway. Now, there is a large amount of information about the signaling pathway which controls the gene expression and cellular proliferation. We have developed an integrated database SPAD to understand the overview of signaling transduction. | expression, extracellular, gene, cellular, cytokine, dna, growth factor, hormone, intermolecular interactions and signaling pathways databases, intracellular, molecule, organism, pathway, plasma membrane, proliferation, protein, receptor, response, sequence, signal, stimulus, stress, transduction, FASEB list | has parent organization: Kyushu University; Fukuoka; Japan | nif-0000-21376 | SCR_008243 | Signaling Pathway Database | 2026-02-14 02:06:13 | 51 | ||||||||
|
Intergrated Transcription Factor Platform Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Intergrated Transcription Factor Platform (RRID:SCR_008119) | data or information resource, database | ITFP is an integrated transcription factor (TF) platform, which included abundant TFs and targets message of mammalian. Support vector machine (SVM) algorithm combined with error-correcting output coding (ECOC) algorithm was utilized to identify and classify transcription factor from protein sequence of Human, Mouse and Rat. For transcription factor targets, a reverse engineering method named ARACNE was used to derive potential interaction pairs between transcription factor and downstream regulated gene from Human, Mouse and Rat gene expression profile data. Detailed information of gene expression profile data can be found in help page. Moreover, all data provided by the platform is free for non-commercial users and can be downloaded through links on help page. | expression, gene, human, message, mouse, protein, rat, sequence, target, transcription factor | has parent organization: Fudan University; Shanghai; China | nif-0000-20862 | SCR_008119 | ITFP | 2026-02-14 02:06:41 | 25 | |||||||||
|
PrimerStudio Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
PrimerStudio (RRID:SCR_008232) | data or information resource, database | PrimerParadise is an online PCR primer database for genomics studies. The database contains predesigned PCR primers for amplification of exons, genes and SNPs of almost all sequenced genomes. Primers can be used for genome-wide projects (resequencing, mutation analysis, SNP detection etc). The primers for eukaryotic genomes have been tested with e-PCR to make sure that no alternative products will be generated. Also, all eukaryotic primers have been filtered to exclude primers that bind excessively throughout the genome. Genes are amplified as amplicons. Amplicons are defined as only one genes exons containing maximaly 3000 bp long dna segments. If gene is longer than 3000 bp then it is split into the segments at length 3000 bp. So for example gene at length 5000 bp is split into two segment and for both segments there were designed a separate primerpair. If genes exons length is over 3000 bp then it is split into amplicons as well. Every SNP has one primerpair. In addition of considering repetitive sequences and mono-dinucleotide repeats, we avoid designing primers to genome regions which contain other SNPs. -There are two ways to search for primers: you can use features IDs ( for SNP primers Reference ID, for gene/exon primers different IDs (Ensembl gene IDs, HUGO IDs for human genes, LocusLink IDs, RefSeq IDs, MIM IDs, NCBI gene names, SWISSPROT IDs for bacterial genes, VEGA gene IDs for human and mouse, Sanger S.pombe systematic gene names and common gene names, S.cerevisiae GeneBanks Locus, AccNo, GI IDs and common gene names) -you can use genome regions (chromosome coordinates, chromosome bands if exists) -Currently we provide 3 primers collections: proPCR for prokaryotic organisms genes primers -euPCR for eukaryotic organisms genes/exons primers -snpPCR for eukaryotic organisms SNP primers Sponsors: PrimerStudio is funded by the University of Tartu. | eukaryotic, exon, gene, amplicon, amplifcation, analysis, dinucleotide, dna, genome, genomic, molecular probe and primer databases, mononucleotide, mutation, organism, pcr, primer, prokaryotic, region, repetitive, segment, sequence, snp, snp detection | nif-0000-21334 | SCR_008232 | PrimerStudio | 2026-02-14 02:06:13 | 1 | ||||||||||
|
ChickBase Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
ChickBase (RRID:SCR_008147) | data or information resource, database | This website contains the mapping sequence of poultry. The ArkDB database system aims to provide a comprehensive public repository for genome mapping data from farmed and other animal species. In doing so, it aims to provide a route in to genomic and other sequence from the initial viewpoint of linkage mapping, RH mapping, physical mapping or - possibly more importantly - QTL mapping data. It's supported, in part, by the USDA-CSREES National Animal Genome Research Program in order to serve the poultry genome mapping community. This system represents a complete rewrite of the original version with the code migrated to java and the underlying database targeted at postgres (although any standards-compliant database engine should suffice). The initial release records details of maps and the markers that they contain. There are alternative entry points that target either a chromosome or a specific mapping analysis as the starting point. Limited relationships between markers are recorded and displayed. As with the previous version, all maps are drawn using data extracted from the database on the fly. | animal, chicken, genome, linkage, map, mapping, marker, meeting, physical, poultry, qtl, rh, sequence, specie | has parent organization: Iowa State University; Iowa; USA | nif-0000-20970 | http://birdbase.arizona.edu/birdbase/ | http://www.genome.iastate.edu/chickmap/ | SCR_008147 | Chick Base | 2026-02-14 02:06:12 | 8 | |||||||
|
Migratory Locust EST Database Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Migratory Locust EST Database (RRID:SCR_008201) | data or information resource, database | The migratory locust (Locusta migratoria) is an orthopteran pest and a representative member of hemimetabolous insects. Its transcriptomic data provide invaluable information for molecular entomology study of the insect and pave a way for comparative studies of other medically, agronomically, and ecologically relevant insects. This first transcriptomic database of the locust (LocustDB) has been developed, building necessary infrastructures to integrate, organize, and retrieve data that are either currently available or to be acquired in the future. It currently hosts 45,474 high quality EST sequences from the locust, which were assembled into 12,161 unigenes. This database contains original sequence data, including homologous/orthologous sequences, functional annotations, pathway analysis, and codon usage, based on conserved orthologous groups (COG), gene ontology (GO), protein domain (InterPro), and functional pathways (KEGG). It also provides information from comparative analysis based on data from the migratory locust and five other invertebrate species, such as the silkworm, the honeybee, the fruitfly, the mosquito and the nematode. LocustDB also provides information from comparative analysis based on data from the migratory locust and five other invertebrate species, such as the silkworm, the honeybee, the fruitfly, the mosquito and the nematode. It starts with the first transcriptome information for an orthopteran and hemimetabolous insect and will be extended to provide a framework for incorporation of in-coming genomic data of relevant insect groups and a workbench for cross-species comparative studies. | ecologically, entomology, est, fruitfly, functional, gene, agronomically, analysis, annotation, codon, comparative, data, domain, genomic, hemimetabolous, homologous, honeybee, insect, invertebrate, invertebrate databases, locust, locusta migratoria, medically, migratory, molecular, mosquito, nematode, orthologous, orthopteran, pathway, pest, protein, sequence, silkworm, specie, transcriptome, transcriptomic, unigene, ontology | has parent organization: BGI; Shenzhen; China | nif-0000-21244 | SCR_008201 | LocustDB | 2026-02-14 02:06:42 | 7 | |||||||||
|
Caenorhabditis Genome Sequencing Projects Resource Report Resource Website |
Caenorhabditis Genome Sequencing Projects (RRID:SCR_008155) | data or information resource, database | The Sanger Institute and the Genome Sequencing Center at the Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis have collaborated to sequence the genomes of both C. elegans and C. briggsae. The completed C. elegans genome sequence is represented by over 3,000 individual clone sequences which can be accessed through this site (or through WormBase). These sequences are submitted to EMBL whenever the sequence or annotation changes (e.g. modification to gene structures) and these submissions are then mirrored to GenBank and DDBJ. These sequences (along with ESTs and proteins) can be searched on our C. elegans BLAST server. WormBase is the repository of mapping, sequencing and phenotypic information for C. elegans. The worm informatics group at the Sanger Institute play a key role in assembling the whole database. They also curate and develop some of the constituent databases that comprise WormBase. | elegans, briggsae, caenorhabditis, clone, genome, mapping, phenotypic, sequence | has parent organization: Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute; Hinxton; United Kingdom | nif-0000-21001 | SCR_008155 | CGSP | 2026-02-14 02:06:07 | 0 | |||||||||
|
Alternative Exon Database Resource Report Resource Website |
Alternative Exon Database (RRID:SCR_008157) | AEdb | data or information resource, database | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on March 27, 2013. A manual generated database for alternative exons and their properties from numerous species - the data is gathered from literature where these exons have been experimentally verified. Most alternative exons are cassette exons and are expressed in more than two tissues. Of all exons whose expression was reported to be specific for a certain tissue, the majority were expressed in the brain. At the moment, AEdb products that are available are sequence (a database of alternative exons), function (a database of functions attributed to constitutive and alternative exon), regulatory sequence (a database of transcript regulatory motifs), minigenes (a table of minigenes and their associations to splicing events), and diseases (a table of diseases associated with splicing and their associations to AltSplice). Alternative splicing is an important regulatory mechanism of mammalian gene expression. The alternative splicing database (ASD) consortium is systematically collecting and annotating data on alternative splicing. The continuation and upgrade of the ASD consists of computationally and manually generated data. Its largest parts are AltSplice, a value-added database of computationally delineated alternative splicing events. Its data include alternatively spliced introns/exons, events, isoform splicing patterns and isoform peptide sequences. AltSplice data are generated by examining gene-transcript alignments. The data are annotated for various biological features including splicing signals, expression states, (SNP)-mediated splicing and cross-species conservation. AEdb forms the manually curated component of ASD. It is a literature-based data set containing sequence and properties of alternatively spliced exons, functional enumeration of observed splicing events, characterization of observed splicing regulatory elements, and a collection of experimentally clarified minigene constructs. | element, exon, expression, gene, alignment, alternative, brain, conservation, cross-specie, disease, isoform, mechanism, minigene, pattern, peptide, regulatory, sequence, signal, splice, splicing, structure intron, tissue, transcript, nucleotide sequence, gene structure, intron, splice site, alternative splicing, sequence, alternative exon, function, constitutive exon, alternative exon, regulatory sequence, transcript regulatory motif, minigene, disease | has parent organization: European Bioinformatics Institute | PMID:16381912 | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-21009 | SCR_008157 | 2026-02-14 02:06:34 | 0 | |||||||
|
Protochlamydia amoebophila UWE25 Resource Report Resource Website |
Protochlamydia amoebophila UWE25 (RRID:SCR_008222) | data or information resource, database | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on July 15, 2013. This is the official database of the environmental chlamydia genome project. This resource provides access to finished sequence for Parachlamydia-related symbiont UWE25 and to a wide range of manual annotations, automatical analyses and derived datasets. Functional classification and description has been manually annotated according to the Annotation guidelines. Chlamydiae are the major cause of preventable blindness and sexually transmitted disease. Genome analysis of a chlamydia-related symbiont of free-living amoebae revealed that it is twice as large as any of the pathogenic chlamydiae and had few signs of recent lateral gene acquisition. We showed that about 700 million years ago the last common ancestor of pathogenic and symbiotic chlamydiae was already adapted to intracellular survival in early eukaryotes and contained many virulence factors found in modern pathogenic chlamydiae, including a type III secretion system. Ancient chlamydiae appear to be the originators of mechanisms for the exploitation of eukaryotic cells. Environmental chlamydiae have recently been recognized as obligate endosymbionts of free-living amoebae and have been implicated as potential human pathogens. Environmental chlamydiae form a deep branching evolutionary lineage within the medically important order Chlamydiales. Despite their high diversity and ubiquitous distribution in clinical and environmental samples only limited information about genetics and ecology of these microorganisms is available. The Parachlamydia-related Acanthamoeba symbiont UWE25 was therefore selected as representative environmental chlamydia strain for whole genome sequencing. Comparative genome analysis was performed using PEDANT and simap. Sponsors: The environmental chlamydia genome project was funded by the bmb+f (German Federal Ministry of Education and Research) and is part of the Competence Network PathoGenoMiK. | ecology, endosymbiont, environmental, eukaryote, eukaryotic, evolutionary, functional, gene, genetic, acanthamoeba, amoebae, blindness, cell, chlamydia, classification, clinical, genome, human, intracellular, lateral, lineage, mechanism, microorganism, obligate, parachlamydia, pathogen, pathogenic, sequence, sexually, strain, survival, symbiont, transmitted disease, uwe25, virulence | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-21310 | SCR_008222 | Protochlamydia amoebophila UWE25 | 2026-02-14 02:06:34 | 0 | |||||||||
|
Extended Alternatively Spliced EST Database Resource Report Resource Website |
Extended Alternatively Spliced EST Database (RRID:SCR_008186) | EASED | data or information resource, database | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on July 15, 2013. An online available compendium of alternative splice forms for several organisms (Arabidopsis thaliana, Bos taurus, Caenorhabditis elegans, Drosophila melanogaster, Danio rerio, Homo sapiens, Mus musculus, Rattus norvegicus, Xenopus laevis). Alternative splice forms are defined by comparing high-scoring ESTs to mRNA sequences (both from GenBank) with known exon-intron information (from ENSEMBL database) using BLAST. Repetitive sequences of all mRNAs have beforehand been masked by MaskerAid. Filtering programs with defined parameters compare the ends of each aligned sequence pair for deletions or insertions in the EST sequence, which suggest the existence of alternative splice forms. The database is accessible by typing in accession numbers (ACC) or keywords like description, gene names, organism or other keywords. (If more than one hit was found a list of all results is given.) And the result page is divided into 4 major parts. The first part (General Information About The Entry) summarizes the most important information as database ids, organism, and description. The so called alternative splice profile (ASP) of each human sequence is shown in the second part (Alternative Splice Frequency). The ASP indicates the number of alternatively spliced ESTs (NAE), the number of constitutively spliced ESTs (NCE) as well as the number of alternative splice sites (NSS) per mRNA. NAE and NCE corresponds to the EST coverage and can be used as a quality value for the predicted alternative splice variants. The NSS value specifies the splice propensity of a gene. Moreover the number of ESTs from cancerous tissues is shown. The histological source and the developmental stages are illustrated with several colors to enables the user to get an overview of the origins of the matching ESTs. Also, the Splice Site View shows graphically all alternative splice sites for the whole transcript. | drosophila melanogaster, est, exon, filtering, form, gene structure, aligned, alternative, arabidopsis thaliana, bos taurus, caenorhabditis elegans, cancerous, color, danio rerio, deletion, developmental, histological, homo sapien, insertion, intron, mrna, mus musculus, nucleotide sequence, organism, pair, rattus norvegicus, sequence, splice, splice sites databases, stage, tissue, xenopus laevis | has parent organization: Max Delbruck Center for Molecular Medicine; Berlin; Germany | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-21138 | SCR_008186 | Extended Alternatively Spliced EST Database | 2026-02-14 02:06:07 | 0 | |||||||
|
Mammalian Phosphorylation Resource Resource Report Resource Website |
Mammalian Phosphorylation Resource (RRID:SCR_008210) | MPR | data or information resource, database | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on 6/24/13. A repository of information on commercially available phospho-specific antibodies to human phosphorylation sites. It provides a BLAST search for phosphorylation sites using as query the amino acid sequence surrounding the site. It also provides direct links to the relevant antibodies from many companies including BD Pharmingen, Biosource International, Cell Signaling Technology (CST), Santa Cruz Biotechnologies, Upstate Biotechnology. | amino acid, antibody, human, mammalian, phosphorylation, protein property databases, repository, sequence, blast, data analysis resource |
is listed by: 3DVC has parent organization: Center for Cancer Research |
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-21274 | SCR_008210 | Mammalian Phosphorylation Resource | 2026-02-14 02:06:12 | 0 | |||||||
|
Nh3D: A Reference Dataset of Structures of Non-homologous Proteins Resource Report Resource Website |
Nh3D: A Reference Dataset of Structures of Non-homologous Proteins (RRID:SCR_008212) | Nh3D | data or information resource, database | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on July 17, 2013. It is freely available as a reference dataset for the statistical analysis of sequence and structure features of proteins in the PDB. It is a dataset of structurally dissimilar proteins. This dataset has been compiled by selecting well resolved representatives from the Topology level of the CATH database which hierarchically classifies all protein structures. These have been been pruned to remove: i) domains that may contain homologous elements (by pairwise sequence comparison and structural superposition of aligned residues) ii) internal duplications (by repeat detection) iii) regions with high B-Factor The statistical analysis of protein structures requires datasets in which structural features can be considered independently distributed, i.e. not related through common ancestry, and that fulfill minimal requirements regarding the experimental quality of the structures it contains. However, non-redundant datasets based on sequence similarity invariably contain distantly related homologues. Here a reference dataset of non-homologous protein domains is provided, assuming that structural dissimilarity at the topology level is incompatible with recognizable common ancestry. It contains the best refined representatives of each Topology level, validates structural dissimilarity and removes internally duplicated fragments. The compilation of Nh3D is fully scripted. The current Nh3D list contains 570 domains with a total of 90780 residues. It covers more than 70% of folds at the Topology level of the CATH database and represents more than 90% of the structures in the PDB that have been classified by CATH. Even though all protein pairs are structurally dissimilar, some pairwise sequence identities after global alignment are greater than 30%. Nh3D is freely available as a reference dataset for the statistical analysis of sequence and structure features of proteins in the PDB. | duplication, element, feature, fragment, align, alignment, analysis, b-factor, dissimilar, homologous, protein, protein structure databases, residue, sequence, statistical, structurally, structure, topology | has parent organization: University of Toronto; Ontario; Canada | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-21286 | SCR_008212 | 2026-02-14 02:06:07 | 0 | ||||||||
|
Homologous Sequences in Ensembl Animal Genomes Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Homologous Sequences in Ensembl Animal Genomes (RRID:SCR_008356) | HOMOLENS | data or information resource, database | Database of homologous genes from Ensembl organisms, structured under ACNUC sequence database management system. It allows to select sets of homologous genes among species, and to visualize multiple alignments and phylogenetic trees. It is possible to search for orthologous genes in a wide range of taxons. HOMOLENS is particularly useful for comparative sequence analysis, phylogeny and molecular evolution studies. More generally, HOMOLENS gives an overall view of what is known about a peculiar gene family. Note that HOMOLENS is split into two databases on this server: HOMOLENS contains the protein sequences while HOMOLENSDNA contains the nucleotide sequences. Protein sequences of HOMOLENS have been generated by translating the CDS of HOMOLENSDNA and using associated cross-references to generate the annotations. | ensembl, evolution, gene, alignment, comparative, homologous, molecular, nucleotide, organism, phylogenetic, phylogeny, protein, sequence, specie, structure, taxon, bio.tools |
is listed by: bio.tools is listed by: Debian has parent organization: Claude Bernard University Lyon 1; Lyon; France |
biotools:homolens, nif-0000-25424 | https://bio.tools/homolens | SCR_008356 | 2026-02-14 02:06:42 | 3 | ||||||||
|
Alizadehlab: MeeboChip and HeeboChip Open Source Project Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Alizadehlab: MeeboChip and HeeboChip Open Source Project (RRID:SCR_008384) | data or information resource, database | This is an open-source Mouse Exonic Evidence-Based Oligonucleotide Chip (MEEBOChip), and are in the process of building the human counterpart, HEEBOChip. The set of 70mers for MEEBOChip is already available from Illumina, Inc., with synthesis of HEEBOChip 70mers in progress. Both arrays are based on a novel selection of exonic long-oligonucleotides (70-mers) from a genomic annotation of the corresponding complete genome sequences, using a transcriptome-based annotation of exon structure for each genomic locus. Using a combination of existing and custom-tailored tools and datasets (including millions of mRNA and EST sequences), we built and performed a systematic examination of transcript-supported exon structure for each genomic locus at the base-pair level (i.e., exonic evidence). This strategy allowed them to select both constitutive and in many cases alternative exons for nearly every gene in the corresponding genome (e.g., protocadherin locus), allowing an unprecedented exploration of human and mouse biology. Furthermore, they used experimentally derived data to hone the selection of these 70mers, helping maximize their performance under typical fluorescent labeling and hybridization conditions. Specifically, they applied and refined the ArrayOligoSelector algorithm from Joe DeRisis laboratory to select 70mers, considering not only their uniqueness (i.e., hybridization specificity) within the content of the entire genome, but also to overcome the known biases of labeling and hybridization methods (e.g., 3-biased reverse transcription and in vitro transcription reactions). | mouse, exonic, evidence, oligonucleotide, chip, human, array, genomic, annoation, sequence, transcriptome, annotation, dataset, mrna, est, systematic, transcript, exon, locus, biology | has parent organization: Stanford University; Stanford; California | Stanford University ; UCSF ; Stowers-Institute ; Rockefeller University ; Basel University |
nif-0000-30030 | SCR_008384 | MeeboChip and HeeboChip | 2026-02-14 02:06:08 | 7 |
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 RRID Resources search. From here you can search through a compilation of resources used by RRID and see how data is organized within our community.
You are currently on the Community Resources tab looking through categories and sources that RRID 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 RRID then you can log in from here to get additional features in RRID 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:
If you are logged into RRID you can add data records to your collections to create custom spreadsheets across multiple sources of data.
Here are the facets that you can filter the data by.
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.