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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.

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On page 2 showing 21 ~ 40 out of 315 results
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  • RRID:SCR_006829

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

http://gbrowse.org/

A database and interactive web site for manipulating and displaying annotations on genomes. Features include: detailed views of the genome; use of a variety of premade or personally made glyphs ; customizable order and appearance of tracks by administrators and end-users; search by annotation ID, name, or comment; support of third party annotation using GFF formats; DNA and GFF dumps; connectivity to different databases, including BioSQL and Chado; and a customizable plug-in architecture (e.g. run BLAST, find oligonucleotides, design primers, etc.). GBrowse is distributed as source code for Macintosh OS X, UNIX and Linux platforms, and as pre-packaged binaries for Windows machines. It can be installed using the standard Perl module build procedure, or automated using a network-based install script. In order to use the net installer, you will need to have Perl 5.8.6 or higher and the Apache web server installed. The wiki portion accepts data submissions.

Proper citation: GBrowse (RRID:SCR_006829) Copy   


http://mousesnp.roche.com/

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on July 17, 2013. This website contains a database of the mouse SNP. DNA sequencing was performed along with genotyping. There is information on genotyping, mouse strain, and haplotype map.

Proper citation: Mouse Single Nucleotide Polymorphism Database (RRID:SCR_000033) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002380

    This resource has 10000+ mentions.

http://www.uniprot.org/

Collection of data of protein sequence and functional information. Resource for protein sequence and annotation data. Consortium for preservation of the UniProt databases: UniProt Knowledgebase (UniProtKB), UniProt Reference Clusters (UniRef), and UniProt Archive (UniParc), UniProt Proteomes. Collaboration between European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI), SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics and Protein Information Resource. Swiss-Prot is a curated subset of UniProtKB.

Proper citation: UniProt (RRID:SCR_002380) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_000476

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/DOID

Comprehensive hierarchical controlled vocabulary for human disease representation.Open source ontology for integration of biomedical data associated with human disease. Disease Ontology database represents comprehensive knowledge base of inherited, developmental and acquired human diseases.

Proper citation: Human Disease Ontology (RRID:SCR_000476) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_000643

https://bitbucket.org/dkessner/forqs

Software for forward-in-time population genetics simulation that tracks individual haplotype chunks as they recombine each generation. It also also models quantitative traits and selection on those traits.

Proper citation: forqs (RRID:SCR_000643) Copy   


https://sourceforge.net/p/obo/mailman/message/59165700/

A structured controlled vocabulary of the anatomy of Drosophila melanogaster. These ontologies are query-able reference sources for information on Drosophila anatomy and developmental stages. They also provide controlled vocabularies for use in annotation and classification of data related to Drosophila anatomy, such as gene expression, phenotype and images. They were originally developed by FlyBase, who continue to maintain them and have used them for over 200,000 annotations of phenotypes and expression. Extensive use of synonyms means that, given a suitably sophisticated autocomplete, users can find relevant content by searching with almost any anatomical term they find in the literature. These ontologies are developed in the web ontology language OWL2. Their extensive formalization in OWL can be used to drive sophisticated query systems.

Proper citation: Drosophila anatomy and development ontologies (RRID:SCR_001607) Copy   


https://repository.niddk.nih.gov/study/21

Data and biological samples were collected by this consortium organizing international efforts to identify genes that determine an individual risk of type 1 diabetes. It originally focused on recruiting families with at least two siblings (brothers and/or sisters) who have type 1 diabetes (affected sibling pair or ASP families). The T1DGC completed enrollment for these families in August 2009. They completed enrollment of trios (father, mother, and a child with type 1 diabetes), as well as cases (people with type 1 diabetes) and controls (people with no history of type 1 diabetes) from populations with a low prevalence of this disease in January 2010. T1DGC Data and Samples: Phenotypic and genotypic data as well as biological samples (DNA, serum and plasma) for T1DGC participants have been deposited in the NIDDKCentral Repositories for future research.

Proper citation: Type 1 Diabetes Genetics Consortium (RRID:SCR_001557) Copy   


http://www.biopax.org/

Community standard for pathway data sharing. Standard language that aims to enable integration, exchange, visualization and analysis of biological pathway data. Supports data exchange between pathway data groups and thus reduces complexity of interchange between data formats by providing accepted standard format for pathway data. Open and collaborative effort by community of researchers, software developers, and institutions. BioPAX is defined in OWL DL and is represented in RDF/XML format.Uses W3C standard Web Ontology Language, OWL.

Proper citation: Biological Pathways Exchange (RRID:SCR_001681) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002143

    This resource has 1000+ mentions.

http://amigo.geneontology.org/

Web tool to search, sort, analyze, visualize and download data of interest. Along with providing details of the ontologies, gene products and annotations, features a BLAST search, Term Enrichment and GO Slimmer tools, the GO Online SQL Environment and a user help guide.Used at the Gene Ontology (GO) website to access the data provided by the GO Consortium. Developed and maintained by the GO Consortium.

Proper citation: AmiGO (RRID:SCR_002143) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002103

    This resource has 10+ mentions.

http://www.pathwaycommons.org/pc

Database of publicly available pathways from multiple organisms and multiple sources represented in a common language. Pathways include biochemical reactions, complex assembly, transport and catalysis events, and physical interactions involving proteins, DNA, RNA, small molecules and complexes. Pathways were downloaded directly from source databases. Each source pathway database has been created differently, some by manual extraction of pathway information from the literature and some by computational prediction. Pathway Commons provides a filtering mechanism to allow the user to view only chosen subsets of information, such as only the manually curated subset. The quality of Pathway Commons pathways is dependent on the quality of the pathways from source databases. Pathway Commons aims to collect and integrate all public pathway data available in standard formats. It currently contains data from nine databases with over 1,668 pathways, 442,182 interactions,414 organisms and will be continually expanded and updated. (April 2013)

Proper citation: Pathway Commons (RRID:SCR_002103) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002105

    This resource has 10000+ mentions.

http://htslib.org/

Original SAMTOOLS package has been split into three separate repositories including Samtools, BCFtools and HTSlib. Samtools for manipulating next generation sequencing data used for reading, writing, editing, indexing,viewing nucleotide alignments in SAM,BAM,CRAM format. BCFtools used for reading, writing BCF2,VCF, gVCF files and calling, filtering, summarising SNP and short indel sequence variants. HTSlib used for reading, writing high throughput sequencing data.

Proper citation: SAMTOOLS (RRID:SCR_002105) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002580

    This resource has 50+ mentions.

http://www.biostars.org/

A question answer forum for scientists, focusing on methods in bioinformatics, computational genomics and biological data analysis. They welcome detailed and specific posts, written clearly and simply.

Proper citation: BioStar (RRID:SCR_002580) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002811

    This resource has 10000+ mentions.

http://www.geneontology.org/

Computable knowledge regarding functions of genes and gene products. GO resources include biomedical ontologies that cover molecular domains of all life forms as well as extensive compilations of gene product annotations to these ontologies that provide largely species-neutral, comprehensive statements about what gene products do. Used to standardize representation of gene and gene product attributes across species and databases.

Proper citation: Gene Ontology (RRID:SCR_002811) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002771

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://www.cbil.upenn.edu/RAD

THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, Documented on March 24, 2014. A resource for gene expression studies, storing highly curated MIAME-compliant studies (i.e. experiments) employing a variety of technologies such as filter arrays, 2-channel microarrays, Affymetrix chips, SAGE, MPSS and RT-PCR. Data were available for querying and downloading based on the MGED ontology, publications or genes. Both public and private studies (the latter viewable only by users having appropriate logins and permissions) were available from this website. Specific details on protocols, biomaterials, study designs, etc., are collected through a user-friendly suite of web annotation forms. Software has been developed to generate MAGE-ML documents to enable easy export of studies stored in RAD to any other database accepting data in this format. RAD is part of a more general Genomics Unified Schema (http://gusdb.org), which includes a richly annotated gene index (http://allgenes.org), thus providing a platform that integrates genomic and transcriptomic data from multiple organisms. NOTE: Due to changes in technology and funding, the RAD website is no longer available. RAD as a schema is still very much active and incorporated in the GUS (Genomics Unified Schema) database system used by CBIL (EuPathDB, Beta Cell Genomics) and others. The schema for RAD can be viewed along with the other GUS namespaces through our Schema Browser.

Proper citation: RNA Abundance Database (RRID:SCR_002771) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002792

    This resource has 1+ mentions.

http://diseasome.eu

A disease / disorder relationships explorer and a sample of a map-oriented scientific work. It uses the Human Disease Network dataset and allows intuitive knowledge discovery by mapping its complexity. The Human Disease Network (official) dataset, a poster of the data and related book (Biology - The digital era, ISBN: 978-2-271-06779-1) are available. This kind of data has a network-like organization, and relations between elements are at least as important as the elements themselves. More data could be integrated to this prototype and could eventually bring closer phenotype and genotype. Results should be visual, but also printable. Creating posters can enhance collaborative work. It facilitates discussion and sharing of ideas about the data. This website initiative is an invitation to think about the benefits of networks exploration but above all it tries to outline future designs of scientific information systems.

Proper citation: Diseasome (RRID:SCR_002792) Copy   


http://insitu.fruitfly.org/cgi-bin/ex/insitu.pl

Database of embryonic expression patterns using a high throughput RNA in situ hybridization of the protein-coding genes identified in the Drosophila melanogaster genome with images and controlled vocabulary annotations. At the end of production pipeline gene expression patterns are documented by taking a large number of digital images of individual embryos. The quality and identity of the captured image data are verified by independently derived microarray time-course analysis of gene expression using Affymetrix GeneChip technology. Gene expression patterns are annotated with controlled vocabulary for developmental anatomy of Drosophila embryogenesis. Image, microarray and annotation data are stored in a modified version of Gene Ontology database and the entire dataset is available on the web in browsable and searchable form or MySQL dump can be downloaded. So far, they have examined expression of 7507 genes and documented them with 111184 digital photographs.

Proper citation: Patterns of Gene Expression in Drosophila Embryogenesis (RRID:SCR_002868) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_003081

    This resource has 1000+ mentions.

http://www.bioinformatics.nl/cgi-bin/primer3plus/primer3plus.cgi

A web interface to the Primer3 primer design program as an enhanced alternative for the CGI- scripts that come with Primer3.

Proper citation: Primer3Plus (RRID:SCR_003081) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002964

    This resource has 5000+ mentions.

http://www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress/

International functional genomics data collection generated from microarray or next-generation sequencing (NGS) platforms. Repository of functional genomics data supporting publications. Provides genes expression data for reuse to the research community where they can be queried and downloaded. Integrated with the Gene Expression Atlas and the sequence databases at the European Bioinformatics Institute. Contains a subset of curated and re-annotated Archive data which can be queried for individual gene expression under different biological conditions across experiments. Data collected to MIAME and MINSEQE standards. Data are submitted by users or are imported directly from the NCBI Gene Expression Omnibus.

Proper citation: ArrayExpress (RRID:SCR_002964) Copy   


  • RRID:SCR_002968

http://www.mybiosoftware.com/population-genetics/332

A tool for SNP Search and downloading with local management. It also offers flanking sequence downloading and automatic SNP filtering. It requires Windows and .NET Framework.

Proper citation: SNPHunter (RRID:SCR_002968) Copy   


http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/lovd/home.php?select_db=OCRL

The Lowe Syndrome Mutation Database is now being maintained by the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) at the National Institutes of Health. A database of mutations causing Lowe syndrome. Information on new mutations may be submitted online. Lowe oculocerebrorenal syndrome is an X-linked disorder caused by mutations in the OCRL1 gene, which encodes a 105-kDa Golgi protein with phosphatidylinositol (4,5) bisphosphate 5-phosphatase activity. genetics

Proper citation: Lowes Syndrome Mutation Database (RRID:SCR_002907) Copy   



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