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http://hcv.lanl.gov/content/immuno/immuno-main.html
The HCV Immunology Database contains a curated inventory of immunological epitopes in HCV and their interaction with the immune system, with associated retrieval and analysis tools. The funding for the HCV database project has stopped, and this website and the HCV immunology database are no longer maintained. The site will stay up, but problems will not be fixed. The database was last updated in September 2007. The HIV immunology website contains the same tools, and may be usable for non-HCV-specific analyses. For new epitope information, users of this database can try the Immuno Epitope Database (http://www.immuneepitope.org).
Proper citation: HCV Immunology Database (RRID:SCR_007086) Copy
http://hnrc.hivresearch.ucsd.edu/
The mission of the HIV Neurobehavioral Research Center (HNRC) is to increase our understanding of how HIV and other diseases affect the human nervous system. The HNRC conducts local, national, and international research devoted to advancing our knowledge of the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of HIV-related diseases as they affect the brain and nervous system, and result in impairment of everyday functioning. Research areas of the Center include: - The incidence, prevalence, and features of neurocognitive impairment caused by HIV - The attributes of the virus, host, and host-virus interactions that determine the presentation of HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders - Possible molecular and cellular mechanisms of nervous system impairment, including the mechanisms by which host-virus factors generate neural injury and neurobehavioral disorders - The cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) as a window on CNS events * The role of co-pathogens and comorbidities in neuroAIDS (e.g., hepatitis C infection, methamphetamine abuse) - Real life implications of neurocognitive impairment in terms of work, daily life, and survival - The effects of HIV disease and neurocognitive impairment on family and social adaptation - NeuroAIDS in resource limited settings - Treatments for neurocognitive impairment and behavioral interventions HNRC also has a Developmental Grants Program (DGP), the primary goal of which is the initiation of innovative studies by junior faculty and trainees at UCSD or affiliated institutions with the following objectives: 1. Recruitment to neuroAIDS research of new investigators or established investigators without prior experience in the field; 2. Generation and pilot testing of new research initiatives; 3. Fostering collaboration among investigators from throughout Southern California. The program provides to qualified investigators and trainees any appropriate combination of the following forms of support: 1. Small, 1-2 year grants to support pilot studies; 2. Access to HNRC core resources such as data, specimens, participants, equipment, administrative support, or expert consultation and technical assistance. Lastly, The the NHRC Mentored Investigator Program recruits, supports, and follows the progress of graduate students, postdoctoral (Ph.D. or M.D.) fellows, and junior faculty in disciplines relevant to HNRC research. The HNRC is committed to tailoring our training opportunities to the backgrounds and interests of candidates from a variety of disciplines who join us with various levels of training and experience in research. We have and will continue to provide training and mentoring of medical students, doctoral students in clinical psychology, and postdoctoral fellows in Medicine, Psychiatry, Neurology, and Psychology. Sponsors: The Center is supported by public funding from the National Institutes of Health, the State of California, and other sources.
Proper citation: HIV Neurobehavioral Research Center (RRID:SCR_005370) Copy
The Hepatitis C Virus Database (HCVdb) is a cooperative project of several groups with the mission of providing to the scientific community studying the hepatitis C virus a comprehensive battery of informational and analytical tools. The Viral Bioinformatics Resource Center (VBRC), the Immune Epitope Database and Analysis Resource (IEDB), the Broad Institute Microbial Sequencing Center (MSC), and the Los Alamos HCV Sequence Database (HCV-LANL) are combining forces to acquire and annotate data on Hepatitis C virus, and to develop and utilize new tools to facilitate the study of this group of organisms.
Proper citation: Hepatitis C Virus Database (HCVdb) (RRID:SCR_005718) Copy
The Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) Database Project strives to present HCV-associated genetic and immunologic data in a user-friendly way, by providing access to the central database via web-accessible search interfaces and supplying a number of analysis tools.
Proper citation: HCV Databases (RRID:SCR_002863) Copy
http://www.einstein.yu.edu/centers/ictr/
Patient-derived specimens are essential to research in genomics, proteomics, and biomarkers. We provide banking for biological fluid and tissue specimens as well as human DNA and RNA. We provide secure archival sample storage as well as clinically-annotated specimen biobanks for defined research projects. The core serves the human research blood and tissue banking needs of clinical and translational researchers. Samples can be banked by an individual PI or by a consortium of investigators. All samples are tracked and archived using a secure tracking database, the Einstein-Montefiore Bio-Repository Databank (EM-BRED), http://informatics30.aecom.yu.edu/em-bred/default.aspx. EM-BRED provides qualified investigators with a solution to securely link patient specimens to clinical and pathological data. It consists of a user-friendly query engine that allows for comprehensive specimen search, and ultimately to build clinical annotations of relevance. The facility works under the best practices set out by NCI and ISBER (2006) for collection, storage, and retrieval of human biological materials for research.
Proper citation: Einstein-Montefiore Institute for Clinical and Translational Research Biorepository (RRID:SCR_005297) Copy
http://www.scripps.edu/florida/
Research institute that focuses on basic biomedical science, drug discovery and technology development. The Scripps Florida research team focuses on the development of therapeutics in areas including neurology, cancer, the immune system, cardiovascular disease, metabolic disease, and infectious diseases. This institute has six departments: Cancer Biology, Molecular Therapeutics, Immunology and Microbial Science, Metabolism and Aging, Chemistry, and Molecular and Integrative Neurosciences. There is also the Translational Research Institute (TRI) which includes the following components: Discovery Biology, Drug Metabolism and Pharmacokinetics (DMPK), TRI-Informatics, Lead Identification and HTS, and Medicinal Chemistry. These groups collaborate in the discovery and development of new therapeutic agents. The Scripps Florida institute also offers a graduate program that emphasizes chemistry, chemical biology, biophysics and the biological sciences. This resource also provides a variety of programs for middle school, high school and college-age students to participate in research activities. These programs have a special emphasis on recruiting from historically underrepresented groups in the sciences.
Proper citation: Scripps Research Institute Florida Campus (RRID:SCR_008248) Copy
http://www.ncrr.nih.gov/comparative_medicine/resource_directory/primates.asp#alamo
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented on July 17, 2013. It houses chimpanzees that have been used in biomedical research, but no active, invasive research is conducted on the site. The APF provides for the long-term care and husbandry of chimpanzees that have been used in biomedical research. Charles River Laboratories Inc. operates the facility under contract with the National Institutes of Health. To be used in continuing virological research, the animals must be transferred to active chimpanzee research settings. All chimpanzees at the APF have been exposed to various microorganisms, such as hepatitis C virus and HIV. For this reason, they may be candidates for studies related to these diseases. The National Center for Research Resources (NCRR) may remove infected animals from the APF to other accredited chimpanzee facilities for research purposes. Investigators interested in the chimpanzees at the APF should contact Dr. Harold Watson in NCRR''s Division of Comparative Medicine to discuss research requirements.
Proper citation: Alamogordo Primate Facility (RRID:SCR_008376) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented August 23, 2016. The euHCVdb is a Hepatitis C Virus database oriented towards protein sequence, structure and function analyses and structural biology of HCV. In order to make the existing HCV databases as complementary as possible, the current developments are coordinated with the other databases (Japan and Los Alamos) as part of an international collaborative effort. It is monthly updated from the EMBL Nucleotide sequence database and maintained in a relational database management system. Programs for parsing the EMBL database flat files, annotating HCV entries, filling up and querying the database used SQL and Java programming languages. Great efforts have been made to develop a fully automatic annotation procedure thanks to a reference set of HCV complete annotated well-characterized genomes of various genotypes. This automatic procedure ensures standardization of nomenclature for all entries and provides genomic regions/proteins present in the entry, bibliographic reference, genotype, interesting sites or domains, source of the sequence and structural data that are available as protein 3D models. Hepatitis C, Hepatitis C Virus, Hepatitis C Virus protein .
Proper citation: HCVDB - Hepatitis C Virus Database (RRID:SCR_007703) Copy
http://www.kcl.ac.uk/medicine/research/divisions/diiid/centres/pii/biobank/index.aspx
Centralized specimen archiving and molecular analysis facility that assists researchers wishing to undertake cohort-based projects in areas such HIV/AIDS, HCV infection or MRSA. Its aim is to make medical research easier, more efficient and faster to perform. The IDB collects valuable clinical samples from patients with infections who are attending their partner NHS-Trust clinics. Their core collections include blood samples from patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), hepatitis B (HBV) & hepatitis C (HCV) viruses or methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). Blood samples are separated so that patients������?? DNA, plasmas (cell-free blood) and lymphocytes (white blood cells) can be frozen into a comprehensive library. Medical researchers can access complete sets of samples to answer important clinical questions, if their research project is approved by the IDB''s Management Committee. For this reason they are actively recruiting ''medically interesting'' patients who are infected with HIV, for example: those who remain well ������?? despite being infected for many years; others who are exposed to HIV but remain uninfected; others who develop AIDS very quickly; and, those who are in the process of sero-converting.
Proper citation: Kings College London Infectious Diseases BioBank (RRID:SCR_004827) Copy
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