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http://senselab.med.yale.edu/ordb/
Database of vertebrate olfactory receptors genes and proteins. It supports sequencing and analysis of these receptors by providing a comprehensive archive with search tools for this expanding family. The database also incorporates a broad range of chemosensory genes and proteins, including the taste papilla receptors (TPRs), vomeronasal organ receptors (VNRs), insect olfaction receptors (IORs), Caenorhabditis elegans chemosensory receptors (CeCRs), and fungal pheromone receptors (FPRs). ORDB currently houses chemosensory receptors for more than 50 organisms. ORDB contains public and private sections which provide tools for investigators to analyze the functions of these very large gene families of G protein-coupled receptors. It also provides links to a local cluster of databases of related information in SenseLab, and to other relevant databases worldwide. The database aims to house all of the known olfactory receptor and chemoreceptor sequences in both nucleotide and amino acid form and serves four main purposes: * It is a repository of olfactory receptor sequences. * It provides tools for sequence analysis. * It supports similarity searches (screens) which reduces duplicate work. * It provides links to other types of receptor information, e.g. 3D models. The database is accessible to two classes of users: * General public www users have full access to all the public sequences, models and resources in the database. * Source laboratories are the laboratories that clone olfactory receptors and submit sequences in the private or public database. They can search any sequence they deposited to the database against any private or public sequence in the database. This user level is suited for laboratories that are actively cloning olfactory receptors.
Proper citation: Olfactory Receptor DataBase (RRID:SCR_007830) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented Jan 13, 2022; To enhance the understanding of the evolution of the Kingdom Fungi, 1500+ species were sampled for eight gene loci across all major fungal clades, plus a subset of taxa for a suite of morphological and ultrastructural characters with resulting data: AFTOL Molecular Database (generated by WASABI - Web Accessible Sequence Analysis for Biological Inference), Blast search the AFTOL Database (generated by WASABI), AFTOL primers (generated by WASABI), AFTOL primers by species (generated by WASABI), AFTOL alignments, and the AFTOL Structural and Biochemical Database. Users may submit samples to the AFTOL project. AFTOL is a collaboration centered around four universities in the United States: Duke University (Francois Lutzoni and Rytas Vilgalys), Clark University (David Hibbett), Oregon State University (Joey Spatafora), and University of Minnesota (David McLaughlin). Participants throughout the world have donated vouchers, taxon samples, and gene sequences. The aim of the project is to reconstruct the fungal tree of life using all available data for eight loci (nuclear ribosomal DNA: LSU, SSU, ITS (including 5.8s, ITS1 and ITS2); RNA polymerase II: RPB1, RPB2; elongation factor 1-alpha; mitochondrial SSU rDNA, and mitochondrial ATP synthase protein subunit 6). A further objective of this study is to summarize and integrate current knowledge regarding fungal subcellular features within this new phylogenetic framework. The name of the bioinformatic package developed for AFTOL is WASABI which provides an efficient communication platform to facilitate the collection and dissemination of molecular data to (and from) the laboratories and participants. All molecular data can be viewed, downloaded, verified, and corrected by the participants of AFTOL. A central goal of the WASABI interface is to establish an automated analysis framework that includes basecalling of newly generated chromatograms, contig assembly, quality verification of sequences (including a local BLAST), sequence alignment, and congruence test. Gene sequences that pass all tests and are finally verified by their authors will undergo automated phylogenetic analysis on a regular schedule. Although all steps are initially carried out noninteractively, the users can verify and correct the results at any step and thus initiate the reanalysis of dependent data.
Proper citation: AFTOL (RRID:SCR_004650) Copy
http://aps.unmc.edu/AP/main.php
Database and data analysis system dedicated to glossary, nomenclature, classification, information search, prediction, design, and statistics of Antimicrobial peptides and beyond. The peptide data stored in the APD were gleaned from the literature (PubMed, PDB, Google, and Swiss-Prot) manually in the past several years. Peptides will be registered into this database if: # they are from natural sources (bacteria, protozoa, fungi, plants, and animals); # their antimicrobial activities are demonstrated (MIC
Proper citation: APD (RRID:SCR_006606) Copy
Open source database of curated, non-redundant set of profiles derived from published collections of experimentally defined transcription factor binding sites for multicellular eukaryotes. Consists of open data access, non-redundancy and quality. JASPAR CORE is smaller set that is non-redundant and curated. Collection of transcription factor DNA-binding preferences, modeled as matrices. These can be converted into Position Weight Matrices (PWMs or PSSMs), used for scanning genomic sequences. Web interface for browsing, searching and subset selection, online sequence analysis utility and suite of programming tools for genome-wide and comparative genomic analysis of regulatory regions. New functions include clustering of matrix models by similarity, generation of random matrices by sampling from selected sets of existing models and a language-independent Web Service applications programming interface for matrix retrieval.
Proper citation: JASPAR (RRID:SCR_003030) Copy
http://epigenomegateway.wustl.edu/
Software tool for visualizing and interacting with whole-genome datasets. Browser hosts Human Epigenome Atlas data produced by Roadmap Epigenomics project, but its use of advanced, multi-resolution data formats and its user-friendly interface make it possible for investigators to upload and visualize their own data as custom tracks. Developed and maintained by Epigenome Informatics Group at Washington University in St. Louis.
Proper citation: WashU Human Epigenome Browser (RRID:SCR_006208) Copy
Database of biological collections in natural history museums, herbaria, and other biorepositories resulting from a merger of Index Herbariorum (IH), Biodiversity Collections Index (BCI) and biorepositories.org. It contains more than 14,000 records for biorepository institutions, their collections, and staff members. Their two main goals are to improve access to information about biorepositories, the collections and specimens they house, and the researchers and collection managers who work there; and to facilitate electronic linkages to this information through web services that will rely on unique identifiers assigned to biorepositories and collections. The Consortium for the Barcode of Life (CBOL) has developed and will manage GRBio in collaboration with IH and BCI and in consultation with GBIF and NCBI. GRBio includes four categories of data records that provide information on: * Institutional repositories such as museums, herbaria, botanical gardens, zoos, biomedical research institutes and culture centers; * Institutional collection records such as the bird, algal or insect collections within an institutional repository; * Personal collections such as field samples held by a researcher before they have been accessioned into an institutional collection, or privately owned specimens held by non-researchers; and * Staff members at institutional repositories GRBio operates as a moderated community-curated resource. The community is invited to check and update their records and to register institutions, collections and staff members that have not already been registered. GRBio offers registration of institutional collections, "personal" research collections that have not yet been accessioned into an institutional repository, and privately owned collections.
Proper citation: GRBio (RRID:SCR_002228) Copy
http://www.indexfungorum.org/names/names.asp
International project database indexing all formal names (scientific names) in the Fungi Kingdom. Index Fungorum provides Life Science Identifiers (LSIDs) for records in its database and indicates the status of a name. In the returns from the search page a currently correct name is indicated in green, while others are in blue (a few, aberrant usages of names are indicated in red). All names are linked to pages giving the correct name, with lists of synonyms. Index Fungorum provides a SOAP protocol web service for searching its database and retrieving records. A WSDL file describing the services is available. (adapted from Wikipedia)
Proper citation: Index Fungorum (RRID:SCR_008975) Copy
http://purl.bioontology.org/ontology/FAO
A structured controlled vocabulary for the anatomy of fungi.
Proper citation: Fungal Gross Anatomy Ontology (RRID:SCR_010322) Copy
Database that gathers, generates, and shares taxa, images, videos, and sounds to freely provide knowledge about life on earth to increase awareness and understanding of living nature. Free EOL memberships are ranked so members have greater authority and editorial abilities based on their level of expertise.
Proper citation: EOL - Encyclopedia of Life (RRID:SCR_005905) Copy
DNA barcode data with an online workbench that supports data validation, annotation, and publication for specimen, distributional, and molecular data. The data platform consists of three main modules, a data portal, a database of barcode clusters, and data collection workbench. The Public Data Portal provides access to all public barcode data which consists of data generated using the Workbench module as well as data mined from other sources. The Barcode Index Number (BIN) system assigns a unique identifier to each sequence cluster of COI, providing an interim taxonomic system for species in the animal kingdom. The workbench module integrates secure databases with analytical tools to provide a private collaborative environment for researchers to collect, analyze, and publish barcode data and ancillary DNA sequences. This platform also provides an annotation framework that supports tagging and commenting on records and their components (i.e. taxonomy, images, and sequences), allowing for community-based validation of barcode data. By providing specialized services, it aids in the assembly of records that meet the standards needed to gain BARCODE designation in the global sequence databases. Because of its web-based delivery and flexible data security model, it is also well positioned to support projects that involve broad research alliances. Public data records include record identifiers, taxonomy, specimen details, collection information and sequence data. Data that has been publicly released through BOLD can be retrieved manually through the BOLD public interface or automatically through BOLD web services. BOLD analytical tools are available for any data set that exists in BOLD (including publicly available data). Analytical tools can be accessed through the BOLD Project Console under the headings Sequences Analysis or Specimen Aggregates. Some examples include Taxon ID Tree, Alignment Viewer, Distribution Maps, and Image Library.
Proper citation: BOLD (RRID:SCR_004278) Copy
http://genome.jgi.doe.gov/programs/fungi/index.jsf
Fungal genomics database and interactive analytical tools that integrates all fungal genomes for diverse fungi that are important for energy and environment, the focus of the JGI Fungal program. It integrates genomics data from the DOE JGI and its users and promotes user community participation in data submission, annotation and analysis. Over 100 newly sequenced and annotated fungal genomes from JGI and elsewhere are available to the public through MycoCosm, and new annotated genomes are being added to this resource upon completion of annotation. MycoCosm offers web-based genome analysis tools for fungal biologists to ''navigate'' through sequenced genomes and explore them in the context of ''genome-centric'' and ''comparative views''.
Proper citation: MycoCosm (RRID:SCR_005312) Copy
Ontology designed as a structured controlled vocabulary for cell types. It was constructed for use by the model organism and other bioinformatics databases. It includes cell types from prokaryotes, mammals, and fungi. The ontology is available in the formats adopted by the Open Biological Ontologies umbrella and is designed to be used in the context of model organism genome and other biological databases.
Proper citation: Cell Type Ontology (RRID:SCR_004251) Copy
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mapview/
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on January 4, 2023. Database that provides special browsing capabilities for a subset of organisms in Entrez Genomes. Map Viewer allows users to view and search an organism's complete genome, display chromosome maps, and zoom into progressively greater levels of detail, down to the sequence data for a region of interest. If multiple maps are available for a chromosome, it displays them aligned to each other based on shared marker and gene names, and, for the sequence maps, based on a common sequence coordinate system.
Proper citation: MapViewer (RRID:SCR_003092) Copy
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/proteinclusters
Database of related protein sequences (clusters) consisting of proteins derived from the annotations of whole genomes, organelles and plasmids. It currently limited to Archaea, Bacteria, Plants, Fungi, Protozoans, and Viruses. It contains annotation information, publications, domains, structures, and external links and analysis tools including multiple alignments, phylogenetic trees, and genomic neighborhoods (ProtMap). Data is available for download via Protein Clusters FTP
Proper citation: Protein Clusters (RRID:SCR_003459) Copy
Webserver for taxonomic classification of metagenomic reads.
Proper citation: NBC (RRID:SCR_004772) Copy
http://gpcr.biocomp.unibo.it/bacello/
A predictor for the subcellular localization of proteins in eukaryotes that is based on a decision tree of several support vector machines (SVMs). It classifies up to four localizations for Fungi and Metazoan proteins and five localizations for Plant ones. BaCelLo's predictions are balanced among different classes and all the localizations are considered as equiprobable.
Proper citation: BaCelLo (RRID:SCR_011965) Copy
http://www.catalogueoflife.org/
Comprehensive and authoritative global index of species of animals, plants, fungi and micro-organisms. It consists of a single integrated species checklist and taxonomic hierarchy. The Catalogue holds essential information on the names, relationships and distributions of over 1.3 million species. This figure continues to rise as information is compiled from diverse sources around the world. There are two distinct versions of the Catalogue of Life: the Dynamic Checklist and the Annual Checklist. Choose the version most suited to your needs. If you have a taxonomic database and would like to join the Species 2000 federation of databases in the Catalogue of Life please contact the Species 2000 Secretariat: all candidate databases go through a peer review process. The Annual Checklist Exchange Format defines the format for exchanging data.
Proper citation: Catalogue of Life (RRID:SCR_006701) Copy
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