University of Toronto Set

Resources, databases and tools maintained by University of Toronto

Found 5 links

Displaying 5 links

Canadian Microarray ResourcesResource Content

http://kinase.uhnres.utoronto.ca/CanArrays.html

Contact information, availabilities and expertise of Canadian microarray centres; includes labs that supply cDNA or oligonucleotide spotted arrays and other services, and labs that can analyse RNA with Affymetrix chips.

user feedback
0
No votes yet

DRYGinDatabase Content

http://drygin.ccbr.utoronto.ca/

DRYGIN (Data Repository of Yeast Genetic Interactions)-a web database system that provides a central platform for yeast genetic network analysis and visualization. DRYGIN searches SGA interactions and integrates other data sources, in order to associate the genetic interactions with pathway information, protein complexes, other binary genetic and physical interactions, and Gene Ontology functional annotation.

GeneMANIATool Content

http://www.genemania.org

GeneMANIA is web interface for generating hypotheses about gene function, analyzing gene lists and prioritizing genes for functional assays. Users input a query list for extension and weighting with functionally similar genes. Six organisms are supported.

This content is being maintained by baderg.

Pathway CommonsDatabase Content

http://www.pathwaycommons.org

Pathway Commons is a collection of publicly available pathway data from multiple organisms. Pathway Commons provides a web-based interface that enables biologists to browse and search a comprehensive collection of pathways from multiple sources represented in a common language, a download site that provides integrated bulk sets of pathway information in standard or convenient formats and a web service that software developers can use to conveniently query and access all data.

This content is being maintained by baderg.

RBPDBDatabase Content

http://rbpdb.ccbr.utoronto.ca/

The RNA-Binding Protein DataBase (RBPDB) is a collection of experimental observations of RNA-binding sites, both in vitro and in vivo, manually curated from primary literature. The database is accessible by a web interface which allows browsing by domain or by organism, searching and export of records, and bulk data downloads. Users can also use RBPDB to scan sequences for RBP-binding sites.