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| Resource Name | Proper Citation | Abbreviations | Resource Type |
Description |
Keywords | Resource Relationships | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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DataLad Resource Report Resource Website 50+ mentions |
DataLad (RRID:SCR_003931) | DataLad | data or information resource, software resource, portal | Project to adapt model of open source software distributions to address technical limitations of data sharing and develop all components of data distribution. Builds on top of git-annex and extends it with intuitive command line interface. Enables users to operate on data using familiar concepts, such as files and directories, while transparently managing data access and authorization with underlying hosting providers. Can create DataLad datasets using any data files published on the web. | Data sharing, aggregator, federated platform, distributed version control system, data set |
uses: OpenNeuro uses: CRCNS uses: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) uses: NIH Human Connectome Project uses: Mind Research Network - COINS uses: 1000 Functional Connectomes Project uses: Git uses: git-annex is related to: datasets.datalad.org has parent organization: Dartmouth College; New Hampshire; USA has parent organization: Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg; Saxony-Anhalt; Germany has parent organization: Research Center Jülich; Jülich; Germany works with: ReproIn: The ReproNim image input management system (featuring DataLad) |
NSF 1429999; BMBF 01GQ1411; NSF 1912266; BMBF 01GQ1905; NIH 1P41EB019936-01A1; European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme 945539; European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme 826421; Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft SFB1451-INF; German federal state of Saxony-Anhalt and the European Regional Development Fund ; NIH 1R24MH117295-01A1 |
DOI:10.21105/joss.03262 | Free, Freely available | nlx_158300 | https://github.com/datalad/datalad.org | SCR_003931 | DataGit, Data Lad | 2026-02-14 02:05:23 | 52 | ||||
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Tulane Stem Cell Research and Regenerative Medicine Tissue Culture Core Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Tulane Stem Cell Research and Regenerative Medicine Tissue Culture Core (RRID:SCR_007342) | Tulane Tissue Culture Core | biomaterial supply resource, cell repository, material resource | The Stem Cell Research and Regenerative Medicine''s Tissue Culture Core provides cells for research use within the department, as well as for distribution to other facilities. The core obtains hMSCs from bone marrow donor samples and expands these cells for research use. The hMSC''s are also characterized for bone, fat and cartilage differentiation, and are stored on site for use. The Tissue Culture Core also handles the expansion and characterization of mouse and rat MSC''s. The animal cells are cultured in a separate area, and never interact with human derived cells. We also have a supply of hMSC''s marked with GFP+, Mito Red and Mito Blue available. | stem cell, mesenchymal stem cell, marrow stromal cell, frozen, adult, bone marrow, adipose tissue, bone, fat, cartilage |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: Tulane University School of Medicine; Louisiana; USA |
United States Department of DefenseBlueprint for Neuroscience Research ; NSF ; NIH |
Public: The Tissue Culture Core provides cells for research use within the department, As well as for distribution to other facilities. | nif-0000-00246 | http://www.som.tulane.edu/gene_therapy/distribute.shtml | SCR_007342 | Tulane Stem Cell Research Regenerative Medicine Tissue Culture Core | 2026-02-14 02:05:31 | 1 | |||||
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Biomedical Resource Ontology Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Biomedical Resource Ontology (RRID:SCR_004443) | BRO | data or information resource, ontology, controlled vocabulary | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on April 27,2023. A controlled terminology of resources, which is used to improve the sensitivity and specificity of web searches. It includes ''resource_type'', ''area of research'', and ''activity''. It is under development by a number of NIH-funded researchers who have a combined interest in classification of biomedical resources. The biositemaps site is no longer available but the biomedical resource ontology is still available via bioportal Biomedical Resource Ontology (BRO). | sitemap, resource type, owl, resource |
is listed by: BioPortal is listed by: Biositemaps is related to: Biositemaps is related to: iBIOFind is related to: bioDBcore has parent organization: National Centers for Biomedical Computing |
NIH | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nlx_143813 | http://bioportal.bioontology.org/ontologies/1104 https://bioportal.bioontology.org/ontologies/BRO |
SCR_004443 | 2026-02-14 02:04:46 | 3 | ||||||
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Pathbase Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Pathbase (RRID:SCR_006141) | Pathbase | ontology, data repository, storage service resource, web service, image repository, image collection, data or information resource, service resource, controlled vocabulary, data access protocol, software resource, database | Database of histopathology photomicrographs and macroscopic images derived from mutant or genetically manipulated mice. The database currently holds more than 1000 images of lesions from mutant mice and their inbred backgrounds and further images are being added continuously. Images can be retrieved by searching for specific lesions or class of lesion, by genetic locus, or by a wide set of parameters shown on the Advanced Search Interface. Its two key aims are: * To provide a searchable database of histopathology images derived from experimental manipulation of the mouse genome or experiments conducted on genetically manipulated mice. * A reference / didactic resource covering all aspects of mouse pathology Lesions are described according to the Pathbase pathology ontology developed by the Pathbase European Consortium, and are available at the site or on the Gene Ontology Consortium site - OBO. As this is a community resource, they encourage everyone to upload their own images, contribute comments to images and send them their feedback. Please feel free to use any of the SOAP/WSDL web services. (under development) | histopathology, photomicrograph, macroscopic, mutant, genetically manipulated, pathology, transgenic, rodent, mpath ontology, mouse pathology ontology, skinbase, genotype, skin, gene, tissue, hair, mutant mouse strain, bio.tools |
is listed by: bio.tools is listed by: Debian is related to: Gene Ontology has parent organization: University of Cambridge; Cambridge; United Kingdom is parent organization of: Mouse Pathology Ontology |
Lesion, Mutant mouse strain, Inbred mouse strain | North American Hair Research Society ; Ellison Medical Foundation ; European Union QLRI-1999-00320; European Union LSHG-CT-2006-037188; NCI CA089713; NCRR RR17436; NIH AR49288 |
PMID:20587689 PMID:15623888 PMID:14681470 |
Except where otherwise noted, Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License, v3 Unported, Images on the database remain the property of the persons generously allowing their images to be used and are acknowledged within each record. Images should not be modified, Reproduced or disseminated without the express permission of the submitter. | biotools:pathbase, nlx_151637 | https://bio.tools/pathbase | SCR_006141 | Pathbase - European mutant mouse pathology database | 2026-02-14 02:04:29 | 11 | |||
|
Human Reference Protein Interactome Project Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Human Reference Protein Interactome Project (RRID:SCR_015670) | HuRI | web application, portal, data or information resource, software resource, database, project portal | 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. | protein interactome, protein-protein interaction, ppi, pairwise combination, proteome, human reference | NHGRI R01/U01HG001715; NHGRI P50HG004233; NHLBI U01HL098166; NHLBI U01HL108630; NCI U54CA112962; NCI R33CA132073; NIH RC4HG006066; NICHD ARRA R01HD065288; NICHD ARRA R21MH104766; NICHD ARRA R01MH105524; NIMH R01MH091350; NSF CCF-1219007; NSERC RGPIN-2014-03892 |
PMID:25416956 | Freely Available, Free, Available for download | SCR_015670 | HuRI: The Human Reference Protein Interactome Mapping Project | 2026-02-14 02:04:37 | 20 | |||||||
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Gait in Parkinson's Disease Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Gait in Parkinson's Disease (RRID:SCR_006891) | data or information resource, database | Database that contains measures of gait from 93 patients with idiopathic PD (mean age: 66.3 years; 63% men), and 73 healthy controls (mean age: 66.3 years; 55% men). The database includes the vertical ground reaction force records of subjects as they walked at their usual, self-selected pace for approximately 2 minutes on level ground. Underneath each foot were 8 sensors (Ultraflex Computer Dyno Graphy, Infotronic Inc.) that measure force (in Newtons) as a function of time. The output of each of these 16 sensors has been digitized and recorded at 100 samples per second, and the records also include two signals that reflect the sum of the 8 sensor outputs for each foot. This database also includes demographic information, measures of disease severity (i.e., using the Hoehn & Yahr staging and/or the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale) and other related measures (available in HTML or xls spreadsheet format). A subset of the database includes measures recorded as subjects performed a second task (serial 7 subtractions) while walking, which shows excerpts of swing time series from a patient with PD and a control subject, under usual walking conditions and when performing serial 7 subtractions. Under usual walking conditions, variability is larger in the patient with PD (Coefficient of Variation = 2.7%), compared to the control subject (CV = 1.3%). Variability increases during dual tasking in the subject with PD (CV = 6.5%), but not in the control subject (CV = 1.2%). | gait, speed, treadmill, stride variability |
is used by: NIF Data Federation is used by: Aging Portal has parent organization: Physiobank |
Parkinson's disease | NIH ; National Parkinson's Foundation ; Parkinson's Disease Foundation |
PMID:16053531 | Acknowledgement requested | nif-0000-00248 | SCR_006891 | 2026-02-14 02:06:27 | 1 | ||||||
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BRAIN Initiative Cell Atlas Network Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
BRAIN Initiative Cell Atlas Network (RRID:SCR_022794) | BICAN | data or information resource, portal | Provides molecular and anatomical foundational framework for study of brain function and disorders.Comprehensive Center on Human and Non-Human Primate Brain Cell Atlases with goal to build reference brain cell atlases that will be used throughout research community. | Cell Atlas Network, study of brain function and disorders, build reference brain cell atlases |
uses: NIH NeuroBioBank uses: NeMOarchive uses: Terra uses: Brain Image Library uses: SpinalJ uses: Cell Annotation Platform uses: Connectome Workbench uses: BALSA uses: Cytosplore Viewer uses: Cellarium is related to: BICCN is related to: Brain Cell Data Viewer is related to: CZ CELLxGENE Discover is related to: CATlas is related to: Epi-Retro-Seq is related to: NeMO Analytics is related to: UCSC Cell Browser is related to: MetaMarkers is related to: Brain Knowledge Platform is related to: HOMBA Adult Human Basal Ganglia Atlas has parent organization: Allen Institute has parent organization: Allen Institute for Brain Science has organization facet: Slide-seq Pipeline has organization facet: ATAC Pipeline has organization facet: Multiome Pipeline has organization facet: MapMyCells has organization facet: Whole Mouse Brain Cell and Genome Atlas has organization facet: snm3C Pipeline has organization facet: Paired-Tag Pipeline has organization facet: NIMP: Neuroanatomy-anchored Information Management Platform for Collaborative BICAN Data Generation has organization facet: NHash Identifier has organization facet: Atlas Ontology Model has organization facet: Allen Brain Map BICCN Data Catalog has organization facet: Atlas Ontology Model has organization facet: Early Postnatal Developmental Mouse Brain Atlas has organization facet: BRAINCELL-AID has organization facet: JOSA has organization facet: Annotation Comparison Explorer has organization facet: Brain Image Library has organization facet: DELAY has organization facet: chromograph has organization facet: fetal_brain_multiomics has organization facet: CBI BrAinPI has organization facet: bkbit has organization facet: BuildIndices has organization facet: HOMBA Macaque Reference Atlas has organization facet: HOMBA Adult Marmoset Basal Ganglia Atlas has organization facet: SlideTags.wdl has organization facet: storm-control has organization facet: PIANO:Probabilistic Inference Autoencoder Networks for multi-Omics has organization facet: BICAN Basal Ganglia Epigenome Explorer has organization facet: Brain Initiative Cell Atlas Network Data Catalog has organization facet: BrainKB |
NIH MH130968; NIH MH130918 |
Free, Freely available | https://www.braininitiative.org/funding-opportunity/brain-initiative-cell-atlas-network-bican-comprehensive-center-on-human-and-non-human-primate-brain-cell-atlases-um1-clinical-trial-not-allowed/ https://braininitiative.nih.gov/funding-opportunies/brain-initiative-cell-atlas-network-bican-specialized-collaboratory-human-non |
SCR_022794 | 2026-02-14 02:05:49 | 18 | |||||||
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dbSTS Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
dbSTS (RRID:SCR_000400) | dbSTS | data or information resource, database | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, as of October 1, 2013; however, the site is still accessible. NCBI resource that contains sequence and mapping data on short genomic landmark sequences or Sequence Tagged Sites. STS sequences are incorporated into the STS Division of GenBank. The dbSTS database offers a route for submission of STS sequences to GenBank. It is designed especially for the submission of large batches of STS sequences. | genomic, mapping, sequence, gold standard, bio.tools |
is listed by: bio.tools is listed by: Debian has parent organization: NCBI |
NIH | PMID:2781285 | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | biotools:dbsts, nif-0000-20939, r3d100010649 | https://bio.tools/dbsts https://doi.org/10.17616/R39P5C |
SCR_000400 | NCBI dbSTS: database of Sequence Tagged Sites, Sequence Tagged Sites Database, NCBI dbSTS, dbSTS: database of Sequence Tagged Sites, Database of Sequence Tagged Sites | 2026-02-14 02:05:43 | 3 | ||||
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National Disease Research Interchange Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions Rating or validation data |
National Disease Research Interchange (RRID:SCR_000550) | NDRI | biomaterial supply resource, tissue bank, material resource | NDRI is a Not-For-Profit (501c3) Corporation dedicated to providing the highest quality human biomaterials for research. NDRI makes it easy for researchers to get the human tissues and organs they need, prepared, preserved and shipped precisely according to their specific scientific protocols, as quickly as possible, and in the largest available quantities. NDRI provides researchers with protocol specific human neurological tissues such as brain stem, spinal cord, and basal ganglia, among others. In addition to control specimens, NDRI recovers tissues from donors with a variety of diseases, including Down syndrome, Parkinsons disease, Alzheimers disease, schizophrenia, and dementia. Through the NDRI 24/7 referral and procurement system, research consented biospecimens can be provided from low post mortem interval donors preserved at 4ºC, frozen or snap frozen, fixed, paraffin embedded, or as unstained slides. | neurological, tissue, organ, cell, neurological tissue, brainstem, spinal cord, basal ganglia, cerebral cortex, hippocampus, frozen, snap frozen, fixed, paraffin embedded, unstained slide, disease, down syndrome, parkinson's disease, alzheimer's disease, schizophrenia, dementia, control, normal, catalog |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing is listed by: Multiple Sclerosis Discovery Forum is listed by: Biospecimens/Biorepositories: Rare Disease-HUB (RD-HUB) is parent organization of: Human Tissue and Organ for Research Resource (HTORR) is parent organization of: Human Biological Data Interchange is parent organization of: NDRI Dorsal Root Ganglia Program |
Down syndrome, Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease, Schizophrenia, Dementia | NIH OD011158 | Public: NDRI is a nonprofit organization that procures and distributes normal and diseased human biomaterials to biomedical researchers in academia, government, and industry. | nlx_99804 | SCR_000550 | 2026-02-14 02:05:43 | 190 | ||||||
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Phenologs Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Phenologs (RRID:SCR_005529) | Phenologs | data or information resource, database | Database for identifying orthologous phenotypes (phenologs). Mapping between genotype and phenotype is often non-obvious, complicating prediction of genes underlying specific phenotypes. This problem can be addressed through comparative analyses of phenotypes. We define phenologs based upon overlapping sets of orthologous genes associated with each phenotype. Comparisons of >189,000 human, mouse, yeast, and worm gene-phenotype associations reveal many significant phenologs, including novel non-obvious human disease models. For example, phenologs suggest a yeast model for mammalian angiogenesis defects and an invertebrate model for vertebrate neural tube birth defects. Phenologs thus create a rich framework for comparing mutational phenotypes, identify adaptive reuse of gene systems, and suggest new disease genes. To search for phenologs, go to the basic search page and enter a list of genes in the box provided, using Entrez gene identifiers for mouse/human genes, locus ids for yeast (e.g., YHR200W), or sequence names for worm (e.g., B0205.3). It is expected that this list of genes will all be associated with a particular system, trait, mutational phenotype, or disease. The search will return all identified model organism/human mutational phenotypes that show any overlap with the input set of the genes, ranked according to their hypergeometric probability scores. Clicking on a particular phenolog will result in a list of genes associated with the phenotype, from which potential new candidate genes can identified. Currently known phenotypes in the database are available from the link labeled ''Find phenotypes'', where the associated gene can be submitted as queries, or alternately, can be searched directly from the link provided. | gene, phenotype, ortholog, genotype, human, mouse, yeast, worm | has parent organization: University of Texas at Austin; Texas; USA | Texas Advanced Research Program ; Welch Foundation ; Packard Fellowship ; March of Dimes ; Texas Institute for Drug and Diagnostic Development ; NSF ; NIH ; NIGMS |
PMID:20308572 | nlx_144624 | SCR_005529 | phenologs.org, Phenologs - Systematic discovery of non-obvious disease models and candidate genes | 2026-02-14 02:06:24 | 4 | ||||||
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BiGG Database Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
BiGG Database (RRID:SCR_005809) | BiGG | data or information resource, database | A knowledgebase of Biochemically, Genetically and Genomically structured genome-scale metabolic network reconstructions. BiGG integrates several published genome-scale metabolic networks into one resource with standard nomenclature which allows components to be compared across different organisms. BiGG can be used to browse model content, visualize metabolic pathway maps, and export SBML files of the models for further analysis by external software packages. Users may follow links from BiGG to several external databases to obtain additional information on genes, proteins, reactions, metabolites and citations of interest. | biochemical, genetics, genomics, genome, metabolic network, reconstruction, model, metabolic pathway, gene, protein, reaction, metabolite, metabolic reconstruction, compound, pathway, FASEB list |
uses: SBML is used by: BiGGR is listed by: 3DVC has parent organization: University of California at San Diego; California; USA |
NIH ; Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award - NIH Bioinformatics Training ; University of California at San Diego; California; USA ; Calit2 summer research scholarship ; NIGMS GM00806-06 |
PMID:20426874 | nlx_149299, r3d100011567 | https://doi.org/10.17616/R3MG9M | SCR_005809 | BiGG: a Biochemical Genetic and Genomic knowledgebase of large scale metabolic reconstructions, BiGG - a Biochemical Genetic and Genomic knowledgebase | 2026-02-14 02:05:58 | 124 | |||||
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GO-Module Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
GO-Module (RRID:SCR_005813) | GO-Module | data analysis service, production service resource, service resource, analysis service resource | GO-Module provides an interface to reduce the dimensionality of GO enrichment results and produce interpretable biomodules of significant GO terms organized by hierarchical knowledge that contain only true positive results. Users can download a text file of GO terms annotated with their significance and identified biomodules, a network visualization of resultant GO IDs or terms in PDF format, and view results in an online table. Platform: Online tool | functional similarity, visualization, other analysis, reduce the dimensionality of go enrichment results, produce interpretable biomodules of significant go terms, gene ontology, ontology or annotation visualization, annotation |
is listed by: Gene Ontology Tools is related to: Gene Ontology is related to: AmiGO has parent organization: University of Illinois at Chicago; Illinois; USA |
NIH ; Cancer Research Foundation ; NLM K22 LM008308; NCI 1U54CA121852; NCRR UL1 RR024999 |
PMID:21421553 | Free for academic use | nlx_149322 | SCR_005813 | Hierarchical optimization of enriched GO terms | 2026-02-14 02:05:53 | 3 | |||||
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Worldwide Protein Data Bank (wwPDB) Resource Report Resource Website 1000+ mentions |
Worldwide Protein Data Bank (wwPDB) (RRID:SCR_006555) | wwPDB | data or information resource, database | Public global Protein Data Bank archive of macromolecular structural data overseen by organizations that act as deposition, data processing and distribution centers for PDB data. Members are: RCSB PDB (USA), PDBe (Europe) and PDBj (Japan), and BMRB (USA). This site provides information about services provided by individual member organizations and about projects undertaken by wwPDB. Data available via websites of its member organizations. | 3-dimentional, bioinformatics, protein, research, structure, macromolecule, structural data, 3d spatial image, gold standard |
is used by: Ligand Expo is recommended by: NIDDK Information Network (dkNET) is recommended by: NIDDK - National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases is related to: Biological Magnetic Resonance Data Bank (BMRB) is related to: Proteopedia - Life in 3D is related to: NRG-CING is related to: Research Collaboratory for Structural Bioinformatics Protein Data Bank (RCSB PDB) is related to: DNA DataBank of Japan (DDBJ) is related to: PDBe - Protein Data Bank in Europe is related to: PDBe - Protein Data Bank in Europe is related to: PDBj - Protein Data Bank Japan is related to: Biological Magnetic Resonance Data Bank (BMRB) is related to: Research Collaboratory for Structural Bioinformatics Protein Data Bank (RCSB PDB) is related to: PDB Validation Server is related to: Structural Antibody Database is parent organization of: PDB-Dev works with: PDB-REDO |
NSF ; NIGMS ; DOE ; NLM ; NCI ; NINDS ; NIDDK ; European Molecular Biology Laboratory ; Heidelberg; Germany ; Wellcome Trust ; BBSRC ; NIH ; European Union ; NBDC - National Bioscience Database Center ; Japan Science and Technology Agency |
PMID:14634627 | Free, Freely available | nif-0000-23903, r3d100011104 | https://doi.org/10.17616/R3462V | SCR_006555 | World Wide Protein DataBank, wwPDB, Worldwide Protein Data Bank (wwPDB), World Wide Protein Data Bank, Worldwide Protein DataBank | 2026-02-14 02:06:26 | 1215 | ||||
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Xenopus Gene Collection Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Xenopus Gene Collection (RRID:SCR_007023) | XGC | biomaterial supply resource, material resource | NIH initiative to support production of cDNA libraries, clones and 5'/3' sequences and to provide set of full-length (open reading frame) sequences and cDNA clones of expressed genes for Xenopus laevis and Xenopus tropicalis. Clones distribution is outsourced to for profit companies. Project concluded in September 2008. Resources generated by XGC are publicly accessible to biomedical research community. All sequences are deposited into GenBank.Corresponding clones are available through IMAGE clone distribution network. With conclusion of XGC project, GenBank records of XGC sequences will be frozen, without further updates. Since knowledge of what constitutes full-length coding region for some of genes and transcripts for which we have XGC clones will likely change in future, users planning to order XGC clones will need to monitor for these changes. Users can make use of genome browsers and gene-specific databases, such as UCSC Genome browser, NCBI's Map Viewer, and Entrez Gene, to view relevant regions of genome (browsers) or gene-related information (Entrez Gene). | est sequencing, expressed gene, frog, gene, adult, cdna, genomic, open reading frame, sequencing, stage, tag, xenopus laevis, xenopus tropicalis, sequence, expressed sequence tag, cdna, vector, cdna library, clone, 5'/3' sequence, frozen |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing is related to: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing is related to: ATCC is related to: GenBank is related to: Invitrogen Clones has parent organization: National Cancer Institute |
NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research ; NIH |
Free, Freely available | nif-0000-00224 | https://genecollections.nci.nih.gov/XGC/ | SCR_007023 | Xenopus Gene Collection | 2026-02-14 02:06:40 | 4 | |||||
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ZMP Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
ZMP (RRID:SCR_006161) | ZMP | biomaterial supply resource, material resource | Create knockout alleles in protein coding genes in the zebrafish genome, using a combination of whole exome enrichment and Illumina next generation sequencing, with the aim to cover them all. Each allele created is analyzed for morphological differences and published on the ZMP site. Transcript counting is performed on alleles with a morphological phenotype. Alleles generated are archived and can be requested from this site through the Zebrafish International Resource Center (ZIRC). You may register to receive updates on genes of interest, or browse a complete list, or search by Ensembl ID, gene name or human and mouse orthologue. | phenotype, genome, gene, disease model, allele, orthologue, mutant, chromosome, human orthologue, mouse orthologue, mutation, knockout, human, mouse, transcript |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing is related to: Zebrafish International Resource Center has parent organization: Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute; Hinxton; United Kingdom |
Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute; Hinxton; United Kingdom ; NIH ; ZF-HEALTH |
Free and open | nlx_151662 | SCR_006161 | Zebrafish Mutation Project (ZMP), Zebrafish Mutation Project, ZMP - Zebrafish Mutation Project | 2026-02-14 02:07:02 | 25 | ||||||
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Genetics of Kidneys in Diabetes Resource Report Resource Website |
Genetics of Kidneys in Diabetes (RRID:SCR_000133) | GoKinD, Go KinD | biomaterial supply resource, material resource | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on July 31,2025. Collect, store, and distribute genetic samples from cases and controls of type 1 diabetes and diabetic nephropathy for investigator-driven research into the genetic basis of diabetic nephropathy. As the risk of kidney complications in type 1 diabetes appears to have a considerable genetic component, this study assembled a large data resource for researchers attempting to identify causative genetic variants. The types of data collected allowed traditional case-control testing, a rapid and often powerful approach, and family-based analysis, a robust approach that is not influenced by population substructure. | clinical, genetics, genetic variant, gene, data set |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing is listed by: NIDDK Information Network (dkNET) has parent organization: George Washington University; Washington D.C.; USA |
Type 1 diabetes, Diabetes, Diabetic nephropathy, Kidney disease | JDRF ; NIH |
PMID:16775037 | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nlx_152764 | http://www.gokind.org/access | SCR_000133 | Genetics of Kidneys in Diabetes (GoKinD) Study, Genetics of Kidneys in Diabetes Study | 2026-02-14 02:06:57 | 0 | |||
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DISCO Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
DISCO (RRID:SCR_004586) | DISCO | software resource, service resource | DISCO is an information integration approach designed to facilitate interoperation among Internet resources. It consists of a set of tools and services that allows resource providers who maintain information to share it with automated systems such as NIF. NIF is then able to harvest the information and keep those sets of information up-to-date. How is this accomplished? By using a series of files and/or scripts which are then placed in the root directory of the resource developer''s resource. (NIF can also host the files on its servers and crawl for changes there.) Once the files of the resource providers are in place, and DISCO is notified, the DISCO server can then recognize and consume the information shared, providing machine understandable information to NIF Integrator Servers (also known as Aggregators) about your resource. What can DISCO do for my resource? * Inform search engines about your resource and keep your NIF Registry resource description up-to-date. * Expose your data (semi-structured datasets or fields within your structured database) through NIF''s Data Federation you choose what data will be shared. * Create links from an NCBI database (e.g., PubMed, Protein, Nucleotide, etc.) to your data records in NIF using Entrez LinkOut. * Advertise your terminology or ontological information. * Share your resource''s news with the NIF community., THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 16,2025. | interoperation, sitemap, linkout, news, harvest, aggregate, FASEB list |
is used by: NIF Data Federation has parent organization: Neuroscience Information Framework has parent organization: Yale School of Medicine; Connecticut; USA |
NIH | PMID:20387131 PMID:18975149 |
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nlx_143827 | SCR_004586 | registration and interoperation framework, DISCO: Extensible Web resource DISCOvery | 2026-02-14 02:06:47 | 332 | |||||
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LAMHDI: The Initiative to Link Animal Models to Human DIsease Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
LAMHDI: The Initiative to Link Animal Models to Human DIsease (RRID:SCR_008643) | data or information resource, database | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, it has been replaced by Monarch Initiative. LAMHDI, the initiative to Link Animal Models to Human DIsease, is designed to accelerate the research process by providing biomedical researchers with a simple, comprehensive Web-based resource to find the best animal model for their research. LAMDHI is a free, Web-based, resource to help researchers bridge the gap between bench testing and human trials. It provides a free, unbiased resource that enables scientists to quickly find the best animal models for their research studies. LAMHDI includes mouse data from MGI, the Mouse Genome Informatics website; zebrafish data from ZFIN, the Zebrafish Model Organism Database; rat data from RGD, the Rat Genome Database; yeast data from SGD, the Saccharomyces Genome Database; and fly data from FlyBase. LAMHDI.org is operational today, and data is added regularly. Enhancements are planned to let researchers contribute their knowledge of the animal models available through LAMHDI. The LAMHDI goal is to allow researchers to share information about and access to animal models so they can refine research and testing, and reduce or replace the use of animal models where possible. LAMHDI Database Search: LAMHDI brings together scientifically validated information from various sources to create a composite multi-species database of animal models of human disease. To do this, the LAMHDI database is prepared from a variety of sources. The LAMHDI team takes publicly available data from OMIM, NCBI''s Entrez Gene database, Homologene, and WikiPathways, and builds a mathematical graph (think of it as a map or a web) that links these data together. OMIM is used to link human diseases with specific human genes, and Entrez provides universal identifiers for each of those genes. Human genes are linked to their counterpart genes in other species with Homologene, and those genes are linked to other genes tentatively or authoritatively using the data in WikiPathways. This preparatory work gives LAMHDI a web of human diseases linked to specific human genes, orthologous human genes, homologous genes in other species, and both human and non-human genes involved in specific metabolic pathways associated with those diseases. LAMHDI includes model data that partners provide directly from their data structures. For instance, MGI provides information about mouse models, including a disease for each model, as well as some genetic information (the ID of the model, in fact, identifies one or more genes). ZFIN provides genetic information for each zebrafish model, but no diseases, so zebrafish models are integrated by using the genes as the glue. For instance, a zebrafish model built to feature the zebrafish PKD2 gene would plug into the larger disease-gene map at the node representing the zebrafish PKD2 gene, which is connected to the node representing the human PKD2 gene, which in turn is connected to the node representing the human disease known as polycystic kidney disease. (Some of the partner data LAMHDI receives can even extend the base map. MGI provides a disease for every model, and in some cases this allows the creation of a disease-to-gene relationship in the LAMHDI database that might not already be documented in the OMIM dataset.) With curatorial and model information in hand, LAMHDI runs a lengthy automated process that exhaustively searches for every possible path between each model and each disease in the data, up to a set number of hops, producing for each disease-to-model pair a set of links from the disease to the model. The algorithm avoids circular paths and paths that include more than one disease anywhere in the middle of the path. At the end of this phase, LAMHDI has a comprehensive set of paths representing all the disease-to-model relationships in the data, varying in length from one hop to many hops. Each disease-to-model path is essentially a string of nodes in the data, where each node represents a disease, a gene, a linkage between genes (an orthologue, a homologue, or a pathway connection, referred to as a gene cluster or association), or a model. Each node has a human-friendly label, a set of terms and keywords, and - in most cases - a URL linking the node to the data source where it originated. When a researcher submits a search on the LAMHDI website, LAMHDI searches for the user''s search terms in its precomputed list of all known disease-to-model paths. It looks for the terms not only in the disease and model nodes, but also in every node along each path. The complete set of hits may include multiple paths between any given disease-to-model pair of endpoints. Each of these disease-to-model pair sets is ordered by the number of hops it involves, and the one involving the fewest hops is chosen to represent its respective disease-to-model pair in the search results presented to the user. Results are sorted by scores that represent their matches. The number of hops is one barometer of the strength of the evidence linking the model and the disease; fewer hops indicates the relationship is stronger, more hops indicates it may be weaker. This indicator works best for comparing models from a single partner dataset: MGI explicitly identifies a disease for each mouse model, so there can be disease-to-model hits for mice that involve just one hop. Because ZFIN does not explicitly identify a disease for each model, no zebrafish model will involve fewer than four hops to the nearest disease, from the zebrafish model to a zebrafish gene to a gene cluster to a human gene to a human disease. | fly, animal, biologic, community, database, disease, genome, human, informatics, international, internet, knockout, model, mouse, network, organism, pathway, primate, rat, research, saccharomyces, testing, treatment, trial, worm, zebrafish |
has parent organization: University of Washington; Seattle; USA has parent organization: University of Wisconsin-Madison; Wisconsin; USA has parent organization: University of California at San Diego; California; USA |
NIH OD011883; NIH NS058296 |
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-32417 | SCR_008643 | LAMHDI | 2026-02-14 02:06:43 | 2 | |||||||
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Project Tycho Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Project Tycho (RRID:SCR_010489) | data or information resource, database | Database to advance the availability and use of public health data for science and policy making that includes data from all weekly notifiable disease reports for the United States dating back to 1888. Additional U.S. and international data will be released twice yearly. | population, disease, metadata standard, vaccination, public health data, health, incidence rate, death, statistics | has parent organization: University of Pittsburgh; Pennsylvania; USA | Smallpox, Polio, Measles, Mumps, Rubella, Hepatitis A, Whooping cough, Diphtheria, Etc. | Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation ; NIH |
PMID:24283231 PMID:24611167 |
Account required, Creative Commons Attribution License | nlx_157982 | SCR_010489 | Project Tycho Data for Health | 2026-02-14 02:06:44 | 2 | |||||
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Nanomaterial Registry Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
Nanomaterial Registry (RRID:SCR_013700) | MIAN | data or information resource, database | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on June 9,2023. Registry that archives curated nanomaterial research data and their biological and environmental implications. The Registry provides data management plans for researchers, and accepts users' public-ready data, archive them, integrate them into the registry, allowing for the data to be shared publicly. Users can request more information on specific nanomaterial records, compare multiple nanomaterials, and export data to their desktop. | registry, information resource, nanomaterial, data management | is listed by: NIH Data Sharing Repositories | NIH | DOI:10.1109/BIBMW.2012.6470258 | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | SCR_013793, r3d100011129 | https://doi.org/10.17616/R38S53 | SCR_013700 | 2026-02-14 02:06:20 | 151 |
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