Sentences with phrase «model organism database»

The Arabidopsis Information Resource (TAIR): a model organism database providing a centralized, curated gateway to Arabidopsis biology, research materials and community
The Alliance brings together the efforts of the major National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)- funded Model Organism Database (MOD) groups, and the Gene Ontology (GO) Consortium, in a synergistic integration of expertly - curated information about the functioning of cellular systems.
She has been a co-principal investigator for the model organism database FlyBase at Harvard.
Collins also discussed funding of model organism databases, citing the open letter for support of these key resources, which had over 11,000 signatures at the time of his talk.
A group of TAGC attendees concerned about the future of model organism databases took the opportunity to start #saveMODfunding on Twitter.
Articles feature links to model organism databases like SGD, FlyBase, and WormBase.
Many of the model organism databases (MODs) used by members of the GSA community — including FlyBase, WormBase, SGD, ZFIN, and MGI — have been supported by NIH's National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), along with others supporting human and other research — such as OMIM, the Gene Ontology Consortium, and UniProt.
GSA has also emphasized the importance of the model organism databases in response to several NIH requests for information.
To better serve the broader research community, WormBase, with five other Model Organism Databases and The Gene Ontology project, have begun to collaborate formally as the Alliance of Genome Resources.

Not exact matches

By creating MARRVEL (Model organism Aggregated Resources for Rare Variant ExpLoration) they are now able to help not only their own lab but also researchers everywhere search databases all at once and in a matter of minutes.
Leaders of the model organism communities and GSA are working together with NIH to identify solutions that will maintain the integrity of the databases and be more cost - efficient.
In 1997, when few genome sequences were available, Hieter helped create XREFdb, a public database that linked the functional annotations of genes studied in model organisms with the phenotypic annotations on the human and mouse genetic maps.
To date, seven databases can exchange data using the API (GeneMatcher, PhenomeCentral, DECIPHER, MyGene2, matchbox, Australian Genomics Health Alliance Patient Archive, and Monarch Initiative; the latter included for model organism matching).
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