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BMC Bioinformatics is a peer-reviewed open access scientific journal covering bioinformatics and computational biology published by BioMed Central.It was established in 2000, and has been one of the fastest growing and most successful journals in the BMC Series of journals, publishing 1,000 articles in its first five years.
BioMed Central (BMC) is a United Kingdom-based, for-profit scientific open access publisher that produces over 250 scientific journals. All its journals are published online only. All its journals are published online only.
Bioinformatics; Bioinformatics and Biology Insights; BMC Bioinformatics; Briefings in Bioinformatics; Bulletin of Mathematical Biology; Cancer Informatics; Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal; Computational Biology and Chemistry; Computers in Biology and Medicine; Current Bioinformatics; Database; EMBnet.journal; Evolutionary ...
BMC Biophysics; BMC Biotechnology; BMC Cancer; BMC Cardiovascular Disorders; BMC Cell Biology; BMC Chemical Biology; BMC Chemical Engineering; BMC Chemistry; BMC Clinical Pathology; BMC Clinical Pharmacology; BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine; BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies; BMC Dermatology; BMC Developmental Biology; BMC Ear ...
The PGP repository accepts submissions from the European plant science community. The web-based submission tool for small datasets and Java desktop submission tool for gigabyte scale datasets use the ELIXIR Authentication and authorization infrastructure (AAI). A review process ensures the technical quality of data submissions.
Organizers provide protein sequences with unknown or incomplete function to community and set the deadline for the submission of predictions Target accumulation: 6–12 months; After all predictions are stored and the experiment enters a waiting period in which protein functions are expected to accumulate in public databases Analysis Phase: 1 month
The Toxin and Toxin-Target Database (T3DB) is a unique bioinformatics resource that compiles comprehensive information about common or ubiquitous toxins and their toxin-targets.
Submit a protein or DNA sequence for SCOP superfamily and family level classification using the SUPERFAMILY HMM's. Sequences can be submitted either by raw input or by uploading a file, but all must be in FASTA format. Sequences can be amino acids, a fixed frame nucleotide sequence, or all frames of a submitted nucleotide sequence.