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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.
A curated database that provides comprehensive integrated biological information for Saccharomyces cerevisiae along with search and analysis tools to explore these data. SGD allows researchers to discover functional relationships between sequence and gene products in fungi and higher organisms. The SGD also maintains the S. cerevisiae Gene Name Registry, a complete list of all gene names used in S. cerevisiae which includes a set of general guidelines to gene naming. Protein Page provides basic protein information calculated from the predicted sequence and contains links to a variety of secondary structure and tertiary structure resources. Yeast Biochemical Pathways allows users to view and search for biochemical reactions and pathways that occur in S. cerevisiae as well as map expression data onto the biochemical pathways. Literature citations are provided where available.
Proper citation: SGD (RRID:SCR_004694) Copy
https://reich.hms.harvard.edu/software
Software application that finds skews in ancestry that are potentially associated with disease genes in recently mixed populations like African Americans. It can be downloaded for either UNIX or Linux.
Proper citation: Ancestrymap (RRID:SCR_004353) Copy
https://github.com/smithlabcode/riborex
Software R package for identification of differential translation from Ribo-seq data. Computational tool for mapping genome wide differences in translation efficiency.
Proper citation: riborex (RRID:SCR_019104) Copy
https://www.cbcb.umd.edu/software/epiviz
Software package as interactive visualization tool for functional genomics data. Interactive visual analytics for functional genomics data.
Proper citation: Epiviz (RRID:SCR_022796) Copy
https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/Maaslin2.html
SoftwareR package that identifies microbial taxa correlated with factors of interest using generalized linear models and mixed models.Used for efficiently determining multivariable association between clinical metadata and microbial meta'omic features.
Proper citation: MaAsLin2 (RRID:SCR_023241) Copy
https://github.com/ParkerLab/ataqv
Software package for QC and visualization of ATAC-seq results. Used to examine aligned reads and report basic metrics, including reads mapped in proper pairs, optical or PCR duplicates, reads mapping to autosomal or mitochondrial references, ratio of short to mononucleosomal fragment counts, mapping quality, various kinds of problematic alignments.
Proper citation: ataqv (RRID:SCR_023112) Copy
https://github.com/fritzsedlazeck/SURVIVOR
Software tool set for simulating and evaluating SVs, merging and comparing SVs within and among samples, and includes various methods to reformat or summarize SVs. Used for for SV simulation, comparison and filtering.
Proper citation: SURVIVOR (RRID:SCR_022995) Copy
https://github.com/marbl/merqury
Software toolkit for reference free quality, completeness, and phasing assessment for genome assemblies. Genome assembly quality evaluation based on k-mers.
Proper citation: Merqury (RRID:SCR_022964) Copy
https://github.com/virajbdeshpande/AmpliconArchitect
Software package designed to call circular DNA from short read WGS data.Used to identify one or more connected genomic regions which have simultaneous copy number amplification and elucidates architecture of amplicon.Used to reconstruct structure of focally amplified regions using whole genome sequencing and validate it extensively on multiple simulated and real datasets, across wide range of coverage and copy numbers.
Proper citation: AmpliconArchitect (RRID:SCR_023150) Copy
https://github.com/genome/bam-readcount
Software tool that runs on BAM or CRAM file and generates low level information about sequencing data at specific nucleotide positions. Its outputs include observed bases, readcounts, summarized mapping and base qualities, strandedness information, mismatch counts, and position within the reads.
Proper citation: bam readcount (RRID:SCR_023653) Copy
https://bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/oligo.html
Software R package to analyze oligonucleotide arrays at probe level. Supports Affymetrix (CEL files) and NimbleGen arrays (XYS files). Used for annotation of Affymetrix Gene Array data.
Proper citation: Preprocessing tools for oligonucleotide arrays (RRID:SCR_023726) Copy
https://github.com/churchmanlab/genewalk
Software for individual genes functions determination that are relevant in particular biological context and experimental condition. Quantifies similarity between vector representations of gene and annotated GO terms through representation learning with random walks on condition specific gene regulatory network. Similarity significance is determined through comparison with node similarities from randomized networks.
Proper citation: GeneWalk (RRID:SCR_023787) Copy
http://www.broad.mit.edu/annotation/fungi/fgi/
Produces and analyzes sequence data from fungal organisms that are important to medicine, agriculture and industry. The FGI is a partnership between the Broad Institute and the wider fungal research community, with the selection of target genomes governed by a steering committee of fungal scientists. Organisms are selected for sequencing as part of a cohesive strategy that considers the value of data from each organism, given their role in basic research, health, agriculture and industry, as well as their value in comparative genomics.
Proper citation: Fungal Genome Initiative (RRID:SCR_003169) Copy
Database on the sequence of the euchromatic genome of Drosophila melanogaster In addition to genomic sequencing, the BDGP is 1) producing gene disruptions using P element-mediated mutagenesis on a scale unprecedented in metazoans; 2) characterizing the sequence and expression of cDNAs; and 3) developing informatics tools that support the experimental process, identify features of DNA sequence, and allow us to present up-to-date information about the annotated sequence to the research community. Resources * Universal Proteomics Resource: Search for clones for expression and tissue culture * Materials: Request genomic or cDNA clones, library filters or fly stocks * Download Sequence data sets and annotations in fasta or xml format by http or ftp * Publications: Browse or download BDGP papers * Methods: BDGP laboratory protocols and vector maps * Analysis Tools: Search sequences for CRMs, promoters, splice sites, and gene predictions * Apollo: Genome annotation viewer and editor September 15, 2009 Illumina RNA-Seq data from 30 developmental time points of D. melanogaster has been submitted to the Short Read Archive at NCBI as part of the modENCODE project. The data set currently contains 2.2 billion single-end and paired reads and over 201 billion base pairs.
Proper citation: Berkeley Drosophila Genome Project (RRID:SCR_013094) Copy
Interoperability framework which supports integrative genomics analysis via access to various bioinformatics tools. Rather than performing analyses itself, GenomeSpace acts as a hub for data from supported bioinformatics tools and reformats data and results when necessary.
Proper citation: GenomeSpace (RRID:SCR_014967) Copy
Software package that provides the ability to do a number of standard semantic similarity methods and includes novel methods for combining these with dynamic selection of anonymous grouping classes. Platform: Windows compatible, Mac OS X compatible, Linux compatible, Unix compatible
Proper citation: OwlSim (RRID:SCR_006819) Copy
The NCGC Pharmaceutical Collection (NPC) is a comprehensive, publically-accessible collection of approved and investigational drugs for high-throughput screening that provides a valuable resource for both validating new models of disease and better understanding the molecular basis of disease pathology and intervention. The NPC has already generated several useful probes for studying a diverse cross section of biology, including novel targets and pathways. NCGC provides access to its set of approved drugs and bioactives through the Therapeutics for Rare and Neglected Diseases (TRND) program and as part of the compound collection for the Tox21 initiative, a collaborative effort for toxicity screening among several government agencies including the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the National Toxicology Program (NTP), the US Food and Drugs Administration (FDA), and the NCGC. Of the nearly 2750 small molecular entities (MEs) that have been approved for clinical use by US (FDA), EU (EMA), Japanese (NHI), and Canadian (HC) authorities and that are amenable to HTS screening, we currently possess 2,400 as part of our screening collection. The NPC resource currently consists of (i) the physical collection suitable for high throughput screening (HTS) and (ii) the informatics browser and database. Putting together the physical collection has been surprisingly challenging in terms of the time and effort required in the informatics, compound management and synthetic chemistry related activities required for this endeavor. We provide access to the NPC screening library through collaboration. Please contact our Scientific Director Dr. Chris Austin for additional information. The other half of the NPC resource is the NPC browser. This is a self-contained software that is actively developed and maintained by the informatics group to provide electronic access to the NPC content. The latest version of the NPC browser for various platforms can be downloaded.
Proper citation: NCGC Pharmaceutical Collection (RRID:SCR_006909) Copy
http://rarediseases.info.nih.gov/GARD/Default.aspx
Genetic and Rare Diseases Information Center (GARD) is a collaborative effort of two agencies of the National Institutes of Health, The Office of Rare Diseases Research (ORDR) and the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) to help people find useful information about genetic conditions and rare diseases. GARD provides timely access to experienced information specialists who can furnish current and accurate information about genetic and rare diseases. So far, GARD has responded to 27,635 inquiries on about 7,147 rare and genetic diseases. Requests come not only from patients and their families, but also from physicians, nurses and other health-care professionals. GARD also has proved useful to genetic counselors, occupational and physical therapists, social workers, and teachers who work with people with a genetic or rare disease. Even scientists who are studying a genetic or rare disease and who need information for their research have contacted GARD, as have people who are taking part in a clinical study. Community leaders looking to help people find resources for those with genetic or rare diseases and advocacy groups who want up-to-date disease information for their members have contacted GARD. And members of the media who are writing stories about genetic or rare diseases have found the information GARD has on hand useful, accurate and complete. GARD has information on: :- What is known about a genetic or rare disease. :- What research studies are being conducted. :- What genetic testing and genetic services are available. :- Which advocacy groups to contact for a specific genetic or rare disease. :- What has been written recently about a genetic or rare disease in medical journals. GARD information specialists get their information from: :- NIH resources. :- Medical textbooks. :- Journal articles. :- Web sites. :- Advocacy groups, and their literature and services. :- Medical databases.
Proper citation: Genetic and Rare Diseases Information Center (RRID:SCR_008695) Copy
http://interactome.baderlab.org/
Project portal for the Human Reference Protein Interactome Project, which aims generate a first reference map of the human protein-protein interactome network by identifying binary protein-protein interactions (PPIs). It achieves this by systematically interrogating all pairwise combinations of predicted human protein-coding genes using proteome-scale technologies.
Proper citation: Human Reference Protein Interactome Project (RRID:SCR_015670) Copy
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
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