One of its publications named “Guidelines for the Clinical Management of Thalassaemia”, 2nd revised edition is found in the bookshelf of NCBI.
NCBI |
InforMax Inc. was also assisting The National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI, NIH) with various programs including but not limited to the Human Genome Project, GenBank, Entrez, PubMed, and MedLine.
At the NCBI Protein Database, the full name of this peptide is listed as "Toxin BmKAEP".
Upon graduation, Dr. Glasscock pursued his doctorate in Genetics at Washington University in St. Louis where he studied under Warren Gish, Ph.D., developer of the NCBI BLAST sequence analysis program.
NCBI places the anole in subfamily Polychrotinae of the family Iguanidae.
The hospital became an annexe of the Rotunda in the 1970 and the building was sold to the National Council for the Blind of Ireland (NCBI) for £281,000 in 1987.
The technique has largely been supplanted by the approach of sequencing cDNA generated from mRNA and then using bioinformatics tools such as NCBI's BLAST server to determine the source of the sequence, thereby identifying the appropriate exon-intron splice sites.
Established in September 2005, this international community includes representatives from a range of major sequencing and bioinformatics centres (including NCBI, EMBL, DDBJ, JCVI, JGI, EBI, Sanger, FIG) and research institutions.
Thus far, 10 microbial organisms have been identified within these psyllids, among them the primary endosymbiont, whose genome has been sequenced and posted at the NCBI database, as well as a Wolbachia species.
This model was generated using Cn3D software provided by NCBI.
It is one of the few fly families for which there is no DNA data available on NCBI GenBank.
Authored by Professor Frank Nicholas of the University of Sydney, with some contribution from colleagues, the database contains textual information and references as well as links to relevant PubMed and Gene records at the NCBI.
Sequerome - A sequence profiling tool that links each BLAST record to the NCBI ORF enabling complete ORF analysis of a BLAST report.
PubChemSR is a MS-Windows-based data search and retrieval tool for the NCBI's public chemical database PubChem.
The "TaxId" is the taxonomy ID number; it is also a link to the NCBI taxonomy browser, which provides more information about the species to which the protein belongs.
Gish's earliest contributions to BLAST were made while working at the NCBI, starting in July 1989.
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In May 1996, WU-BLAST version 2.0 with gapped alignments was publicly released in the form of a drop-in upgrade for existing users of ungapped NCBI BLAST and WU-BLAST (both at version 1.4, after having forked in 1994).
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As an option to WU-BLAST, Gish implemented a faster, more memory-efficient and more sensitive two-hit BLAST algorithm than is used by the NCBI software.
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WU-BLAST with XDF was the first BLAST suite to support accurate, comprehensive indexed-retrieval of NCBI standard sequence identifiers,
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The NCBI Experimental BLAST Network Service, running the latest BLAST software on SMP hardware against the latest sequence databases, established the NCBI in December 1989, as a convenient, one-stop shop for sequence similarity searching.
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Little NIH funding (average 20% FTE) was received for his WU-BLAST development, starting in November 1995, and ending shortly after the September 1997 release of the NCBI gapped BLAST (“blastall”).