Biological Molecules For Which There Are No Databases
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12.9 years ago
shrees ▴ 40

Hello,

Can you please give examples of biological entities/molecules for which there are no biological databases (includes integrative databases too) available yet?

Thank you, Sonal

biology database dna rna • 3.3k views
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The arsenic DNA database :^)

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12.9 years ago

My answers, not only for biological molecules:

  • the mutation + sample + pedigree + phenotype (semantic) database
  • the semantic pubmed
  • the semantic catalog of softwares (see also seqanswers)
  • the database of obsolete softwares
  • the database of obsolete papers
  • the database of obsolete databases
  • the unique author-id database
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and of course the database of biological entities/molecules for which there are no biological databases...

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A database of obsolete software/paper/databases would be absolutely awesome! Except that whoever decides what is "obsolete" would probably make a lot of ennemies...

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@Eric, Well... the authors could decide to flag their papers as obsolete :-)

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Are software, publications and databases "biological entities"?

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@Neil, no, that's why I said "not only for biological molecules" :o)

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Pierre, there is a semantic pubmed...

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ok, let's say that I want an official semantic from the NCBI :-)

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12.9 years ago

Another answer inspired by : Easiest Way To Obtain Chromosome Length?

The Chromosome Length Database

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12.9 years ago

What would be very useful is I think a peptide signature database. I found one paper (COPS), but the database is not accessible, and anyway I don't think they updated since we have more than 2K complete microbial genomes (around 50 in the paper).

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what paper is that?

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the paper is here: http://bioinformatics.oxfordjournals.org/content/20/16/2886

(I have also edited my post)

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12.9 years ago
Mark Fortner ▴ 10

I suppose you could also say the gene + mutation + disease + pathway + drug semantic database.

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12.9 years ago
Gustavo ▴ 530

I'm not aware of any database collecting, for each studied tissue(*) in (for example) a vertebrate organism, the relative proportions of different cell types as defined by their respective signatures of single-cell gene expression levels.

(*) "Tissue" here would presumably be a hierarchical, multi-level description of multicellular context, from whole organs down to cellular microenvironment.

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12.9 years ago
Mary 11k

Is there a LINC database yet? I was interested in a linc recently and wasn't sure where to turn.

LINC: long intergenic non-coding RNAs. Like this: http://www.rinnlab.com/

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Thanks, that's handy--and I have uploaded a track of them at UCSC, but it's not exactly what I was looking for as a database per se.

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