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| Resource Name | Proper Citation | Abbreviations | Resource Type |
Description |
Keywords | Resource Relationships | |||||||||||||
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South African National Bioinformatics Institute: Resources Resource Report Resource Website |
South African National Bioinformatics Institute: Resources (RRID:SCR_001867) | organization portal, software resource, database, software application, data analysis software, data processing software, data or information resource, portal | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on September 23, 2022. The South African National Bioinformatics Institute delivers biomedical discovery appropriate to both international and African context. Researchers at SANBI perform the highest level of research and provide excellence in education. Research at SANBI has set well recognized milestones in the field of computational biology. The tools and techniques used have not only been developed but also implemented across heterogeneous domains of advanced research. Local and international efforts have driven our discoveries. Until recently, the core of SANBIs research has focused upon gene expression biology. Methods developed and applied at SANBI revolve around a greater understanding of the underlying causes of diseases. SANBI approaches the problem by comparison of genes, genomes and transcriptomes. It uses computational gene expression biology to create novel biological insights and to provide biomarkers for experimental validation. It also performs analysis of human genome variation, transcriptional diversity on both the expression and splicing level and the unravelling of transcriptional regulatory networks. Resources - Hinv, STACKdb, Malaria resources and Trypanosome databases are available for on-line seaching. - SANBI offers WCD, STACKdb, stackPACK and eVOC and the eVOKE viewer as tools that can be downloaded. Sponsors: SANBI receives funding and support from a range of organisations in South Africa and Internationally. Organisations currently supporting SANBI include: South Africa * South African Medical Research Council * South African AIDS Vaccine Initiative * National Bioinformatics Network * National Research Foundation * Claude Leon Foundation * International Business Machines Inc. Europe * European Unions 6th Framework Programme * World Health Organization USA * US National Institutes of Health * Fogarty International Centre * Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research | expression, gene, gene expression, bioinformatics, biological, biology, biomaker, biomedical, computational biology, disease, genome, heterogeneous domain, human, splicing, transcriptional diversity, transcriptional regulatory network, transcriptome, variation | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-10432 | SCR_001867 | SANBI | 2026-02-12 09:43:15 | 0 | |||||||||
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ISCBFM - International Society for Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism Resource Report Resource Website |
ISCBFM - International Society for Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism (RRID:SCR_001989) | ISCBFM | training resource, meeting resource, topical portal, narrative resource, data or information resource, portal, k- program resource | The International Society for Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism is a corporation operated exclusively for the purpose of promoting the advancement of education in the science of cerebral blood flow and metabolism throughout the world. The ISCBFM produces a quarterly newsletter, an official journal (Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism), have a yearly meeting, opportunities to host summer schools and a job board. ISCBFM members organize summer schools which are courses that have the aim to bring together young and experienced scientists for educational purposes. The biennial Brain Meetings also have a substantial part of the time allocated for educational purposes for young scientists interested in the field of cerebral blood flow and metabolism. Preference will be given to suggestions that are seen as a complement to scheduled courses in connection with the Brain Meetings and to courses that are given in between Brain Meetings. | brain, cerebral blood flow, human, metabolism, newsletter, summer school, k-12 | is related to: Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | nif-0000-10674 | SCR_001989 | International Society for Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism, International Society for Cerebral Blood Flow Metabolism, ISCBFM - International Society for Cerebral Blood Flow Metabolism | 2026-02-12 09:43:16 | 0 | ||||||||
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Organization for Human Brain Mapping Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Organization for Human Brain Mapping (RRID:SCR_001978) | data or information resource, portal, organization portal, topical portal | International society dedicated to advancing understanding of anatomical and functional organization of human brain using neuroimaging. Primary function of society is to provide educational forums for exchange of up-to-the-minute and groundbreaking research across neuroimaging methods and applications. OHBM achieves this through its member led committees and Annual Meeting that is held in different locations throughout the world. | dti, eeg, fmri, functional, anatomical, brain, brain imaging, brain mapping, cognitive neuroscientists, human, imaging genetics, research, structural, structural mri, tractography, transcranial magnetic stimulation, neuroimaging, meg | nif-0000-10633 | SCR_001978 | OHBM | 2026-02-12 09:43:16 | 1 | ||||||||||
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Harvey Project: Open Course Collaboratories Resource Report Resource Website |
Harvey Project: Open Course Collaboratories (RRID:SCR_001887) | Harvey Project | data or information resource, narrative resource, training material | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented August 23, 2016. It is an international collaboration of educators, researchers, physicians, students, programmers, instructional designers and graphic artists working together to build interactive, dynamic human physiology course materials on the Web. Sponsors: This work has received funding from the US National Science Foundation. | educator, graphic artist, human, instructional designer, interactive, physician, physiology, programmer, researcher, student | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-10457 | SCR_001887 | The Harvey Project | 2026-02-12 09:43:15 | 0 | ||||||||
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SAMHSAs National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information Resource Report Resource Website |
SAMHSAs National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information (RRID:SCR_002053) | NCADI | bibliography, training material, topical portal, narrative resource, video resource, data or information resource, portal | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on 7/15/13. The Nation's one-stop resource for information about substance abuse prevention and addiction treatment offering more than 500 items to the public, many of which are free of charge. They distribute the latest studies and surveys, guides, videocassettes, and other types of information and materials on substance abuse from various agencies, such as the U.S. Departments of Education and Labor, the Center for Substance Abuse Prevention, the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment, the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, and the National Institute on Drug Abuse. They staff both English- and Spanish-speaking information specialists who are skilled at recommending appropriate publications, posters, and videocassettes; conducting customized searches; providing grant and funding information; and referring people to appropriate organizations. They are available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week to take your calls at 1-800-729-6686. NCADI services include: * an information services staff (English, Spanish, TDD capability) equipped to respond to the public's alcohol, tobacco, and drug (ATD) inquiries; * the distribution of free or low-cost ATD materials, including fact sheets, brochures, pamphlets, monographs, posters, and video tapes from an inventory of over 1,000 items; * a repertoire of culturally-diverse prevention, intervention, and treatment resources tailored for use by parents, teachers, youth, communities and prevention/treatment professionals; * customized searches in the form of annotated bibliographies from alcohol and drug data bases; * access to the Prevention Materials database (PMD) including over 8,000 prevention-related materials and the Treatment Resources Database, available to the public in electronic form; * rapid dissemination of Federal grant announcements for ATD prevention, treatment, and research funding opportunities. | drug, fact sheet, addiction, alcohol, brochure, human, monograph, pamphlet, poster, prevention, publication, self-help, substance abuse, tobacco, treatment, treatment facility, video tape | Free, Available for download, Freely available | nif-0000-12280 | http://ncadi.samhsa.gov/ | SCR_002053 | National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information, SAMHSA's NCADI, SAMHSA's National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information | 2026-02-12 09:43:17 | 0 | |||||||
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Stanford Genomic Resourses Resource Report Resource Website |
Stanford Genomic Resourses (RRID:SCR_001874) | data or information resource, portal, topical portal | This resource hyperlinks to systematic analysis projects, resources, laboratories, and departments at Stanford University. | gene, genes, aspergillus, candida, genome, genomics, human, mouse | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-10436 | SCR_001874 | Genomic Databases | 2026-02-12 09:43:15 | 0 | |||||||||
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NCI Mouse Repository Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
NCI Mouse Repository (RRID:SCR_002264) | NCIMR | organism supplier, material resource, biomaterial supply resource | The NCI Mouse Repository cryoarchives and distributes strains of genetically engineered mice that are of immediate interest to the cancer research community. These are either gene-targeted or transgenic mice that display a cancer-related phenotype, or tool strains (e.g., cre transgenics) that can be used to develop new cancer models. You do not have to be a member of the NCI Mouse Repository or a recipient of NCI funding to have your mouse model distributed through the NCI Mouse Repository. NCI Mouse Repository strains are maintained as live colonies or cryoarchived as frozen embryos, depending on demand. Up to three breeder pairs may be ordered from live colonies. Cryoarchived strains are supplied as frozen embryos or recovery of live mice by the NCI Mouse Repository may be requested. | embryo, engineered, frozen, gene, genetically, breed, breeder, cancer, colony, cryoarchive, human, live, model, mouse model, phenotype, strain, transgenic, mutant, female, male |
is listed by: One Mind Biospecimen Bank Listing has parent organization: NCI-Frederick |
NCI | Free, Freely available | nif-0000-20985 | http://mouse.ncifcrf.gov/ | SCR_002264 | MMHCC, MMHCC Repository, Mouse Models of Human Cancers Consortium (MMHCC) Repository, Mouse Models of Human Cancers Consortium Repository | 2026-02-12 09:43:20 | 19 | |||||
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Blood Group Antigen Gene Mutation Database Resource Report Resource Website |
Blood Group Antigen Gene Mutation Database (RRID:SCR_002297) | BGMUT | data repository, service resource, storage service resource, database, data or information resource | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on August 23, 2019.BGMUT was database that provided publicly accessible platform for DNA sequences and curated set of blood mutation information. Data Archive are available at ftp://ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pub/mhc/rbc/Final Archive. | blood, gene, genetic, allele, allelic, alteration, antigen, blood group, human, mutation, genetic variation, non-human animal, orthologous gene, orthologue, phenotype, bio.tools |
is listed by: bio.tools is listed by: Debian has parent organization: NCBI dbRBC has parent organization: Albert Einstein College of Medicine; New York; USA has parent organization: Roswell Park Cancer Institute has parent organization: Medical University of Graz; Graz; Austria has parent organization: Human Genome Variation Society |
Albert Einstein College of Medicine; New York; USA ; David Opochinsky/Blumenfeld Family Fund ; NIH |
PMID:22084196 | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. | nif-0000-21064, biotools:bgmut | https://bio.tools/bgmut | http://www.bioc.aecom.yu.edu/bgmut/index.htm, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/gv/rbc/xslcgi.fcgi?cmd=bgmut | SCR_002297 | Blood Group Antigen Gene Mutation Database (BGMUT), BGMUT - Blood Group Antigen Gene Mutation Database | 2026-02-12 09:43:20 | 0 | |||
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New Science of Addiction: Genetics and the Brain Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
New Science of Addiction: Genetics and the Brain (RRID:SCR_002770) | New Science of Addiction | training material, topical portal, narrative resource, disease-related portal, data or information resource, portal | A physiologic and molecular look at drug addiction involving many factors including: basic neurobiology, a scientific examination of drug action in the brain, the role of genetics in addiction, and ethical considerations. Designed to be used by students, teachers and members of the public, the materials meet selected US education standards for science and health. Drug addiction is a chronic disease characterized by changes in the brain which result in a compulsive desire to use a drug. A combination of many factors including genetics, environment and behavior influence a person's addiction risk, making it an incredibly complicated disease. The new science of addiction considers all of these factors - from biology to family - to unravel the complexities of the addicted brain. * Natural Reward Pathways Exist in the Brain: The reward pathway is responsible for driving our feelings of motivation, reward and behavior. * Drugs Alter the Brain's Reward Pathway: Drugs work over time to change the reward pathway and affect the entire brain, resulting in addiction. * Genetics Is An Important Factor In Addiction: Genetic susceptibility to addiction is the result of the interaction of many genes. * Timing and Circumstances Influence Addiction: If you use drugs when you are an adolescent, you are more likely to develop lifetime addiction. An individual's social environment also influences addiction risk. * Challenges and Issues in Addiction: Addiction impacts society with many ethical, legal and social issues. | drug abuse, drug delivery, drug, drug of abuse, environmental risk factor, genetic factor, genetics, addiction, gene, treatment, brain, brain circuit, pathway, human, lesson plan, neuron, reward pathway, spanish, teacher, chronic disease | has parent organization: University of Utah Genetic Science Learning Center - Learn Genetics | Substance-Related Disorder | NIDA 1 R25 DA 15461 | Free | nif-0000-00430 | SCR_002770 | 2026-02-12 09:43:27 | 3 | ||||||
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Cognitive Atlas Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Cognitive Atlas (RRID:SCR_002793) | Cognitive Atlas | data or information resource, ontology, controlled vocabulary | Knowledge base (or ontology) that characterizes the state of current thought in cognitive science that captures knowledge from users with expertise in psychology, cognitive science, and neuroscience. There are two basic kinds of knowledge in the knowledge base. Terms provide definitions and properties for individual concepts and tasks. Assertions describe relations between terms in the same way that a sentence describes relations between parts of speech. The goal is to develop a knowledge base that will support annotation of data in databases, as well as supporting improved discourse in the community. It is open to all interested researchers. A fundamental feature of the knowledge base is the desire and ability to capture not just agreement but also disagreement regarding definitions and assertions. Thus, if you see a definition or assertion that you disagree with, then you can assert and describe your disagreement. The project is led by Russell Poldrack, Professor of Psychology and Neurobiology at the University of Texas at Austin in collaboration with the UCLA Center for Computational Biology (A. Toga, PI) and UCLA Consortium for Neuropsychiatric Phenomics (R. Bilder, PI). Most tasks used in cognitive psychology research are not identical across different laboratories or even within the same laboratory over time. A major advantage of anchoring cognitive ontologies to the measurement level is that the strategy for determining changes in task properties is easier than tracking changes in concept definitions and usage. The process is easier because task parameters are usually (if not always) operationalized objectively, offering a clear basis to judge divergence in methods. The process is also easier because most tasks are based on prior tasks, and thus can more readily be considered descendants in a phylogenetic sense. | cognitive function, cognitive phenotype, cognitive process, cognitive science, cognitive state, human, cognitive ontology, cognitive task, experimental task, mental construct, concept, task, eeg, meg, electrocorticography, magnetic resonance, ontology, pet, spect, knowledge environment |
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) is related to: Speech Perception is related to: Brainspell has parent organization: University of Texas at Austin; Texas; USA is parent organization of: Cognitive Atlas Ontology |
NIMH RO1MH082795 | PMID:21922006 PMID:19634038 |
Free, Freely Available | nif-0000-24591 | http://www.nitrc.org/projects/cogatlas | SCR_002793 | cognitive atlas - a collaboratively developed cognitive science ontology | 2026-02-12 09:43:27 | 32 | ||||
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Virtual Physiological Human Network of Excellence Resource Report Resource Website 10+ mentions |
Virtual Physiological Human Network of Excellence (RRID:SCR_002855) | job resource, topical portal, research forum portal, disease-related portal, data or information resource, portal | The VPH NoE is a project which aims to help support and progress European research in biomedical modeling and simulation of the human body. This project will improve our ability to predict, diagnose and treat disease, and have a dramatic impact on the future of healthcare, the pharmaceutical and medical device industries. The VPH Network of Excellence (VPH NoE) is designed to foster, harmonize and integrate pan-European research in the field of i) patient-specific computer models for personalised and predictive healthcare and ii) ICT-based tools for modeling and simulation of human physiology and disease-related processes. The main objectives of the VPH Network of Excellence are to support the: :- Coordination of research portfolios of VPH NoE partners through initiation of Exemplar integrative research projects that encourage inter-institution and interdisciplinary VPH research; :- Integration of research infrastructures of VPH NoE partners through development of the VPH ToolKit: a shared and mutually accessible source of research equipment, managerial and research infrastructures, facilities and services; :- Development of a portfolio of interdisciplinary training activities including a formal consultation on, and assessment of, VPH careers; :- Establishment of a core set of VPH-related dissemination and networking activities which will engage everyone from partners within the VPH NoE/other VPH projects, to national policy makers, to the public at large; :- Creation of Industrial, Clinical and Scientific Advisory Boards that will jointly guide the direction of the VPH NoE and, through consultation, explore the practical and legal options for real and durable integration within the VPH research community; :- Implementation of key working groups that will pursue specific issues relating to VPH, notably integrating VPH research worldwide through international physiome initiatives. Finally, by involving clinical and industrial stakeholders, VPH NoE also plans to lay a reliable ground to support sustainable interactions and collaboration between research and healthcare communities. Virtual Physiological Human lists, as its main target outcome, patient-specific computer models for personalized and predictive healthcare and ICT-based tools for modeling and simulation of human physiology and disease-related processes. Collaborative projects (IPs and STREPs) within the call will meet specific objectives, addressing: patient-specific computational modeling and simulation of organs or systems data integration and new knowledge extraction and clinical applications and demonstration of tangible benefits of patient-specific computational models. The networking action outlined within the call - the VPH NoE - should serve to connect these efforts, and lay the foundations for the methodological and technical framework to support such research. It should also build on previous EC investment in this field, including the outcomes of VPH type' projects funded within the EU Sixth Framework Programme, and through other National and International initiatives. The Virtual Physiological Human Network of Excellence (VPH NoE) has been designed with "service to the community" of VPH researchers as its primary purpose. Its aims range from the development of a VPH ToolKit and associated infrastructural resources, through integration of models and data across the various relevant levels of physiological structure and functional organization, to VPH community building and support. The VPH NoE aims to foster the development of new and sustainable educational, training and career structures for those involved in VPH related science, technology and medicine. The VPH NoE constitutes a leading group of universities, institutes and organizations who will, by integrating their experience and ongoing activities in VPH research, promote the creation of an environment that actively supports and nurtures interdisciplinary research, education, training and strategic development. The VPH NoE will lead the coordination of diverse activities within the VPH Initiative to help deliver: new environments for predictive, patient-specific, evidence-based, more effective and safer healthcare; improved semantic interoperability of biomedical information and contribution to a common health information infrastructure; facile, on-demand access to distributed European computational infrastructure to support clinical decision making; and increased European multidisciplinary research excellence in biomedical informatics and molecular medicine by fostering closer cooperation between ICT, medical device, medical imaging, pharmaceutical and biotech companies. The VPH NoE will connect the diverse VPH Initiative projects, including not only those funded as part of the VPH initiative but also those of previous EC frameworks and national funding schemes, together with industry, healthcare providers, and international organizations, thereby ensuring that these impacts will be realized. VPH NoE work packages and project structure The VPH NoE activities are divided between five main work packages (follow the links at the top of the page for more information on each). In brief, the focus of each work package is as follows: -Work package 1: Network Management -Work package 2: VPH NoE Exemplar Projects -Work package 3: VPH NoE ToolKit development -Work package 4: VPH NoE Training and Career Development -Work package 5: Spreading Excellence within the VPH NoE and VPH-I In view of its role as the networking action for the VPH Initiative, all VPH NoE activities have been designed to serve and interconnect not only the VPH NoE core members, but also the projects funded within the VPH call (VPH-I) and the wider research community. Key activities which the VPH NoE will pursue, in support of the development of a research environment which facilitates integrative, interdisciplinary and multilevel VPH research, are: -Support for integrative research -Training and dissemination activities -Networking activities Sponsors: VPH NoE is supported by The Directorate-General Research (DG RTD) and The Directorate-General Information Society and Media (DG INFSO). | education, environment, european, biomedical, biotechnology, body, computational, development, device, diagnosis, disease, healthcare, human, imaging, industry, medical, model, molecular, patient, pharmaceutical, physiology, research, science, simulation, technology, treatment | Free, Freely available | nif-0000-25315 | SCR_002855 | VPH NoE | 2026-02-12 09:43:28 | 11 | |||||||||
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Sal-Site Resource Report Resource Website 50+ mentions |
Sal-Site (RRID:SCR_002850) | Sal-Site | analysis service resource, portal, service resource, production service resource, topical portal, database, data analysis service, organism-related portal, data or information resource, image collection | Portal that supports Ambystoma-related research and educational efforts. It is composed of several resources: Salamander Genome Project, Ambystoma EST Database, Ambystoma Gene Collection, Ambystoma Map and Marker Collection, Ambystoma Genetic Stock Center, and Ambystoma Research Coordination Network. | gene, genomic, expressed sequence tag, blast, model organism, genome, salamander, animal model, genetic map, genetic marker, gene expression, limb regeneration, microarray, quantitative-pcr, rna-seq, nanostring, husbandry, embryo, limb, mutant, strain, neural, olfaction, phentotype, regeneration, renal, retina, sequence, vision, human, chicken, xenopus tropicalis, FASEB list | has parent organization: University of Kentucky; Kentucky; USA | NSF OB0242833; NSF DBI0443496; NCRR R24 RR016344; NIH Office of the Director R24 OD010435 |
PMID:16359543 | Free, Freely available | nif-0000-25309 | https://orip.nih.gov/comparative-medicine/programs/vertebrate-models | SCR_002850 | Ambystoma Resources for Model Amphibians Database | 2026-02-12 09:43:28 | 92 | ||||
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Computational Biology Center Resource Report Resource Website 50+ mentions |
Computational Biology Center (RRID:SCR_002877) | training resource, topical portal, disease-related portal, data or information resource, portal | Computational biology research at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC) pursues computational biology research projects and the development of bioinformatics resources in the areas of: sequence-structure analysis; gene regulation; molecular pathways and networks, and diagnostic and prognostic indicators. The mission of cBio is to move the theoretical methods and genome-scale data resources of computational biology into everyday laboratory practice and use, and is reflected in the organization of cBio into research and service components ~ the intention being that new computational methods created through the process of scientific inquiry should be generalized and supported as open-source and shared community resources. Faculty from cBio participate in graduate training provided through the following graduate programs: * Gerstner Sloan-Kettering Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences * Graduate Training Program in Computational Biology and Medicine Integral to much of the research and service work performed by cBio is the creation and use of software tools and data resources. The tools that we have created and utilize provide evidence of our involvement in the following areas: * Cancer Genomics * Data Repositories * iPhone & iPod Touch * microRNAs * Pathways * Protein Function * Text Analysis * Transcription Profiling | drug, evolution, experiment, gene, algorithm, bioinformatics, biology, cancer, clinical, computational, diagnostic, genome, human, initiation, kinetics, laboratory, leukemia, ligand, metastasis, microrna, mirna, model, molecular, network, pathway, phenotype, prognostic, progression, protein, regulation, research, resistance, rna, sequence, stem cell, structure, t cell, therapy, treatment, tumor | is parent organization of: TMBETA-GENOME- Annotation of Beta-Barrel Membrane Proteins in Genomic Sequences | Free, Freely available | nif-0000-25560 | SCR_002877 | cBio | 2026-02-12 09:43:28 | 70 | ||||||||
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Development of a Specific-Pathogen-Free Baboon Colony Resource Report Resource Website |
Development of a Specific-Pathogen-Free Baboon Colony (RRID:SCR_002900) | Development of a SPF Baboon Colony | organism supplier, material resource, biomaterial supply resource | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on May 4th,2023. Program developing a self-sustaining colony of baboons free of all known herpesviruses, four retroviruses, and SV40 for research. When the program is fully developed, they will provide healthy, behaviorally normal, SPF baboons that are free of all known herpes viruses, four retroviruses, and SV40. To accomplish this goal, the center has established in collaboration with co-investigators and consultants serological and PCR tests for each of the 11 target viruses. These baboon viruses include six herpesviruses (analogs of human HSV, VZV, CMV, HHV6, EBV, and HHV8), four retroviruses (simian foamy virus, SRV/D, SIV, and STLV), and SV40. Twenty-four infant baboons are being recruited into the SPF program in each of the first five years, for a final total of at least 66 SPF baboons. All infants will be repeatedly tested for each of the target viruses. At one month of age, larger social groups of 4-6 SPF animals are formed. Beginning at 2-3 years of age, SPF animals will be integrated into larger socially compatible groups. These groups will eventually mature into breeding harems of SPF animals. This approach provides infants with age-matched companions for socialization during their early period of development, minimizes opportunities for transmission of viruses to the infants from adult animals, and allows for the simultaneous elimination of many different viruses from SPF animals. | baboon, herpes virus, human, macaque, pathogen, primate, retrovirus, virus | has parent organization: University of Oklahoma; Oklahoma; USA | NCRR R24 RR016556 | THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-25871 | http://www.ncrr.nih.gov/comparative_medicine/resource_directory/primates.asp | SCR_002900 | 2026-02-12 09:43:29 | 0 | ||||||
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Michigan State University Brain Biodiversity Bank Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Michigan State University Brain Biodiversity Bank (RRID:SCR_003289) | training material, database, narrative resource, atlas, data or information resource | The Brain Biodiversity Bank refers to the repository of images of and information about brain specimens contained in the collections associated with the National Museum of Health and Medicine at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology in Washington, DC. Atlases and brain sections are available for a variety of mammals, and we are also developing a series of labeled atlases of stained sections for educators, students, and researchers. These collections include, besides the Michigan State University Collection, the Welker Collection from the University of Wisconsin, the Yakovlev-Haleem Collection from Harvard University, the Meyer Collection from the Johns Hopkins University, and the Huber-Crosby and Crosby-Lauer Collections from the University of Michigan. What we are doing currently at Michigan State is a series of demonstration projects for publicizing the contents of the collections and ways in which they can be used. For example, the images from the collection can be used for comparative brain study. We have prepared databases of the contents of the collections for presentation and use on this site, as well as for downloading by users in several formats. We are also developing a series of labeled atlases of stained sections for educators, students, and researchers. This internet site is associated with the Comparative Mammalian Brain Collections site. All of the images are in JPEG or GIF format. | echidna, anatomy, axolotl, brain, brainstem, cat, cerebellum, chimpanzee, cortex, cow, dolphin, histology, human, hyena, hypothalamus, images, imaging, lion, llama, loris, manatee, mandrill, mongoose, morphology, movies, mri, nissl, owl monkey, pig, polar bear, red kangaroo, rhesus monkey, sea lion, sheep, subcortical, tasmanian devil, weasel, white matter, zebra | has parent organization: Michigan State University; Michigan; USA | Free, Available for download, Freely available | nif-0000-00059, r3d100012667 | https://doi.org/10.17616/R31F77 | SCR_003289 | Brain Biodiversity Bank | 2026-02-12 09:43:34 | 1 | |||||||
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Human Physiology Resource Report Resource Website |
Human Physiology (RRID:SCR_003525) | Human Physiology | data or information resource, wiki, book, narrative resource | Human Physiology is a featured book on Wikibooks because it contains substantial content, it is well-formatted, and the Wikibooks community has decided to feature it on the main page or in other places. Please continue to improve it and thanks for the great work so far! A printable and PDF version are available. You can edit its advertisement template. Contents: 1. Homeostasis 2. Cell Physiology 3. Integumentary System 4. The Nervous System 5. Senses 6. The Muscular System 7. Blood Physiology 8. The Cardiovascular System 9. The Immune System 10. The Urinary System 11. The Respiratory System 12. The Gastrointestinal System 13. Nutrition 14. The Endocrine System 15. The Male Reproductive System 16. The Female Reproductive System 17. Pregnancy and Birth 18. Genetics and Inheritance 19. Development: Birth through Death 20. Appendix 1: Answers to Review Questions 21. Authors 22. Further Reading | anatomy, human, physiology, image | has parent organization: Wikibooks | nlx_10645 | SCR_003525 | 2026-02-12 09:43:37 | 0 | |||||||||
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Talairach Daemon Resource Report Resource Website 100+ mentions |
Talairach Daemon (RRID:SCR_000448) | talairach.org | software resource, database, atlas, software application, data or information resource | Software automated coordinate based system to retrieve brain labels from the 1988 Talairach Atlas. Talairach Daemon database contains anatomical names for brain areas using x-y-z coordinates defined by the 1988 Talairach Atlas. | anatomical structure, atlas, fmri, pet, activation foci, cognition, talairach, human, brain, brain mapping, atlas application, database application, atlas application, database application, java, magnetic resonance, os independent, label, probability map, FASEB list |
is listed by: NeuroImaging Tools and Resources Collaboratory (NITRC) is listed by: Biositemaps is related to: WFU PickAtlas has parent organization: University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio; Texas; USA |
EJLB Foundation ; Human Brain Project |
PMID:10912591 | Free, Available for download, Freely available | nif-0000-00042 | http://www.nitrc.org/projects/tal-daemon | SCR_000448 | Talairach Software | 2026-02-12 09:42:58 | 383 | ||||
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HAMSTeRS - The Haemophilia A Mutation Structure Test and Resource Site Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
HAMSTeRS - The Haemophilia A Mutation Structure Test and Resource Site (RRID:SCR_006883) | HAMSTeRS, HADB, HADB/HAMSTeRS, HADB / HAMSTeRS | data repository, service resource, storage service resource, database, data or information resource |
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on August 27, 2019. Database for those interested in the consequences of Factor VIII genetic variation at the DNA and protein level, it provides access to data on the molecular pathology of haemophilia A. The database presents a review of the structure and function of factor VIII and the molecular genetics of haemophilia A, a real time update of the biostatistics of each parameter in the database, a molecular model of the A1, A2 and A3 domains of the factor VIII protein (based on the crystal structure of caeruloplasmin) and a bulletin board for discussion of issues in the molecular biology of factor VIII. The database is completely updated with easy submission of point mutations, deletions and insertions via e-mail of custom-designed forms. A methods section devoted to mutation detection is available, highlighting issues such as choice of technique and PCR primer sequences. The FVIII structure section now includes a download of a FVIII A domain homology model in Protein Data Bank format and a multiple alignment of the FVIII amino-acid sequences from four species (human, murine, porcine and canine) in addition to the virtual reality simulations, secondary structural data and FVIII animation already available. Finally, to aid navigation across this site, a clickable roadmap of the main features provides easy access to the page desired. Their intention is that continued development and updating of the site shall provide workers in the fields of molecular and structural biology with a one-stop resource site to facilitate FVIII research and education. To submit your mutants to the Haemophilia A Mutation Database email the details. (Refer to Submission Guidelines) |
function, gene, genetic, analysis, bioinformatic, biological, biostatistic, caeruloplasmiin, crystal, haemophilia a, human, murine, porcine, canine, level, molecular, molecule, mutation, nucleic acid, or disease- specific databases, pathology, structural, structure, system-, vitromutagenesis, fviii genetic variation, dna, protein, factor viii, blood-clotting protein, point mutation, deletion, insertion | has parent organization: Imperial College London; London; United Kingdom | Pfizer UK ; MRC |
PMID:9399839 PMID:9016520 PMID:8594555 |
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE | nif-0000-21184 | http://europium.csc.mrc.ac.uk/WebPages/Main/main.htm, http://hadb.org.uk/ | SCR_006883 | HAMSTeRS - The Haemophilia A Mutation Structure Test Resource Site, Haemophilia A Mutation Database, Haemophilia A Mutation Structure Test and Resource Site, Haemophilia A Mutation Structure Test Resource Site | 2026-02-12 09:44:28 | 9 | ||||
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LifeDB Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
LifeDB (RRID:SCR_006899) | LifeDB | data or information resource, database, image collection | Database that integrates large-scale functional genomics assays and manual cDNA annotation with bioinformatics gene expression and protein analysis. LifeDB integrates data regarding full length cDNA clones and data on expression of encoded protein and their subcellular localization on mammalian cell line. LifeDB enables the scientific community to systematically search and select genes, proteins as well as cDNA of interest by specific database identifiers as well as gene name. It enables to visualize cDNA clone and subcellular location of proteins. It also links the results to external biological databases in order to provide a broader functional information. LifeDB also provides an annotation pipeline which facilitates an improved mapping of clones to known human reference transcripts from the RefSeq database and the Ensembl database. An advanced web interface enables the researchers to view the data in a more user friendly manner. Users can search using any one of the following search options available both in Search gene and cDNA clones and Search Sub-cellular locations of human proteins: By Keyword, By gene/transcript identifier, By plate name, By clone name, By cellular location. * The Search genes and cDNA clones results include: Gene Name, Ensemble ID, Genomic Region, Clone name, Plate name, Plate position, Classification class, Synonymous SNP''s, Non- synonymous SNP''s, Number of ambiguous positions, and Alignment with reference genes. * The Search sub-cellular locations of human proteins results include: Subcellular location, Gene Name, Ensemble ID, Clone name, True localization, Images, Start tag and End tag. Every result page has an option to download result data (excluding the microscopy images). On click of ''Download results as CSV-file'' link in the result page the user will be given a choice to open or save result data in form of a CSV (Comma Separated Values) file. Later the CSV file can be easily opened using Excel or OpenOffice. | human, protein, gene, cdna clone, subcellular, open reading frame, functional genomics | has parent organization: German Cancer Research Center | BMBF 01GR0101; BMBF 01GR0420; European Union grant 503438 |
PMID:16381901 PMID:14681468 |
nif-0000-03081 | SCR_006899 | 2026-02-12 09:44:28 | 1 | |||||||
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Tetraodon Genome Browser Resource Report Resource Website 1+ mentions |
Tetraodon Genome Browser (RRID:SCR_007079) | data or information resource, portal, database, topical portal | The initial objective of Genoscope was to compare the genomic sequences of this fish to that of humans to help in the annotation of human genes and to estimate their number. This strategy is based on the common genetic heritage of the vertebrates: from one species of vertebrate to another, even for those as far apart as a fish and a mammal, the same genes are present for the most part. In the case of the compact genome of Tetraodon, this common complement of genes is contained in a genome eight times smaller than that of humans. Although the length of the exons is similar in these two species, the size of the introns and the intergenic sequences is greatly reduced in this fish. Furthermore, these regions, in contrast to the exons, have diverged completely since the separation of the lineages leading to humans and Tetraodon. The Exofish method, developed at Genoscope, exploits this contrast such that the conserved regions which can be identified by comparing genomic sequences of the two species, correspond only to coding regions. Using preliminary sequencing results of the genome of Tetraodon in the year 2000, Genoscope evaluated the number of human genes at about 30,000, whereas much higher estimations were current. The progress of the annotation of the human genome has since supported the Genoscope hypothesis, with values as low as 22,000 genes and a consensus of around 25,000 genes. The sequencing of the Tetraodon genome at a depth of about 8X, carried out as a collaboration between Genoscope and the Whitehead Institute Center for Genome Research (now the Broad Institute), was finished in 2002, with the production of an assembly covering 90 of the euchromatic region of the genome of the fish. This has permitted the application of Exofish at a larger scale in comparisons with the genome of humans, but also with those of the two other vertebrates sequenced at the time (Takifugu, a fish closely related to Tetraodon, and the mouse). The conserved regions detected in this way have been integrated into the annotation procedure, along with other resources (cDNA sequences from Tetraodon and ab initio predictions). Of the 28,000 genes annotated, some families were examined in detail: selenoproteins, and Type 1 cytokines and their receptors. The comparison of the proteome of Tetraodon with those of mammals has revealed some interesting differences, such as a major diversification of some hormone systems and of the collagen molecules in the fish. A search for transposable elements in the genomic sequences of Tetraodon has also revealed a high diversity (75 types), which contrasts with their scarcity; the small size of the Tetraodon genome is due to the low abundance of these elements, of which some appear to still be active. Another factor in the compactness of the Tetraodon genome, which has been confirmed by annotation, is the reduction in intron size, which approaches a lower limit of 50-60 bp, and which preferentially affects certain genes. The availability of the sequences from the genomes of humans and mice on one hand, and Takifugu and Tetraodon on the other, provide new opportunities for the study of vertebrate evolution. We have shown that the level of neutral evolution is higher in fish than in mammals. The protein sequences of fish also diverge more quickly than those of mammals. A key mechanism in evolution is gene duplication, which we have studied by taking advantage of the anchoring of the majority of the sequences from the assembly on the chromosomes. The result of this study speaks strongly in favor of a whole genome duplication event, very early in the line of ray-finned fish (Actinopterygians). An even stronger evidence came from synteny studies between the genomes of humans and Tetraodon. Using a high-resolution synteny map, we have reconstituted the genome of the vertebrate which predates this duplication - that is, the last common ancestor to all bony vertebrates (most of the vertebrates apart from cartilaginous fish and agnaths like lamprey). This ancestral karyotype contains 12 chromosomes, and the 21 Tetraodon chromosomes derive from it by the whole genome duplication and a surprisingly small number of interchromosomal rearrangements. On the contrary, exchanges between chromosomes have been much more frequent in the lineage that leads to humans. Sponsors: The project was supported by the Consortium National de Recherche en Genomique and the National Human Genome Research Institute. | duplication, element, euchromatic, evolution, exon, fish, gene, genetic, actinopterygians, aganth, ancestor, cartilaginous, cdna, chromosome, coding, collagen, cytokine, diversity, genome, genomic, heritage, hormone, human, interchromossomal, intergenic, intron, karyotype, lineage, mammal, molecule, mouse, nigroviridis, protein, proteome, pufferfish, receptor, region, selenoprotein, sequence, size, specie, synteny, system, takifugu, tetraodon, transposable, vertebrate | nif-0000-20997 | SCR_007079 | TGB | 2026-02-12 09:44:22 | 8 |
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