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Scientific Resources

Contents


NIH Literature Databases

Computer Retrieval of Information on Scientific Projects (http://crisp.cit.nih.gov/)
CRISP is a searchable database of federally funded biomedical research projects conducted at universities, hospitals, and other research institutions.

National Library of Medicine (http://www.nlm.nih.gov/)

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Biological Resources

Human

NCI Specimen Research Locator (http://pluto3.nci.nih.gov/tissue/default.htm)
The Specimen Resource Locator is a database to help researchers locate human specimens (tissue, serum, DNA/RNA, other specimens) for cancer research. It includes tissue banks and tissue procurement systems with access to normal, benign precancerous and cancerous human tissue from a variety of organs.

Cooperative Breast Cancer Tissue Resource (http://cbctr.nci.nih.gov/ Supported by NCI)
Provides access to formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded primary breast cancer tissue with associated clinical and follow-up data for research studies, particularly those studies focused on translating basic research findings into clinical application.

AIDS and Cancer Specimen Resource (http://acsb.ucsf.edu/ Supported by NCI)
The country’s leading nationwide multi-site source for tissue and biological samples serving investigators working in the fields of AIDS, cancer, virology, immunology, pathology, epidemiology, tumor biology, assay development, as well as others. The ACSR is a repository for HIV-infected human materials from a wide spectrum of HIV-related or associated diseases, including cancer, and from appropriate HIV-negative controls.

Cancer Family Registries (http://www.cfr.epi.uci.edu/ Supported by NCI)
The CFR, comprised of twelve participating sites and consortia, six of which are dedicated to breast cancer and six dedicated to colon cancer, systematically collect family history information, epidemiologic and clinical data, and related biological specimens from individuals with breast, ovarian, or colorectal cancer and their families.  Ascertainment is both population-based and clinic-based. The CFR research data and biospecimens are available to the scientific community at large through a process predicated on the establishment of collaborative studies that are subject to external peer review.

Study of Women's Health Across the Nation Repository (http://www.nia.nih.gov/ResearchInformation/ScientificResources/SWANdescription.htm Supported by NIA)
The biologic specimen bank of the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation (SWAN). SWAN is a National Institutes of Health funded, multi site, longitudinal study of the natural history of the midlife including the menopausal transition. The SWAN Repository contains blood and urine specimens, collected at each study participant's annual visit. In addition, a subset of participants provide urine samples over the length of one menstrual cycle each year. All of these samples are in the SWAN Repository, stored at -70°, and are available to researchers who wish to study the midlife and menopausal transition. A DNA repository, containing two types of specimens: whole blood and sputum pellets and immortalized cells, is being developed with approximately 50% of anticipated samples collected to date. All DNA samples are stored in liquid nitrogen. Scientists who use SWAN Repository specimens can also request data collected at participant's annual visits. Medical and health history, psychosocial measures, biological measures, and anthropometry are collected during the annual visit.

NHLBI Biological Specimen Repository (http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/resources/medres/reposit/contents.htm Supported by NHLBI)
The NHLBI has been vigilant in surveillance for new and emerging infectious agents that might contaminate the U.S. blood supply, and be transmitted by transfusions. Since the mid-1970s, the Institute's Blood Division has established and supported several large blood specimen repositories to perform prospective and retrospective studies of blood donors and recipients. About 90% of the samples are from the blood safety program, and the rest from other NHLBI programs. Use of these samples has been extensive, and from 1991-2004, a total of 148,667 specimens from the NHLBI Biological Specimen Repository were sent to various investigators.

National Disease Research Interchange (http://www.ndriresource.org/)
NDRI is a nonprofit organization that procures and distributes normal and diseased human tissues for laboratory research studies to investigators in academia, government, and industry. Core support for NDRI comes from NCRR, NEI, NIAID, NIDDK, NIAMS, and the Office of Rare Diseases at the National Institutes of Health. Additional sources of support include the NDRI Partners Program, voluntary health organizations and private donations.

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Animal

Model Organisms for Biomedical Research (http://www.nih.gov/science/models/)
Information about national and international activities and major resources that are being developed to facilitate biomedical research using mammalian and nonmammalian models that include mouse, rat, yeast, amoebae, yeast, round worm, fruit fly, zebrafish, and frog.

Aged Rodent Colonies Handbook (http://www.nia.nih.gov/ResearchInformation/ScientificResources/AgedRodentColoniesHandbook/ Supported by NIA)
Rodent colonies maintained under contractual arrangement with commercial vendors. Animals are available to investigators at academic and nonprofit research institutions and are a limited resource developed for use in aging research. They are not available for use as a general source of adult animals for unrelated areas of research.

Aged Rodent Tissue Bank Handbook (http://www.nia.nih.gov/ResearchInformation/ScientificResources/AgedRodentTissueBankHandbook/ Supported by NIA)
A repository of tissue collected from the NIA Aged Rodent Colonies that are barrier maintained and specific pathogen free. Tissues are fresh frozen and stored at –80 degrees Celsius. Tissue arrays containing multiple tissues from NIA rodents spanning the lifespan are now included in the tissue bank. Tissue from the NIA Aged Rodent Tissue Bank is available to investigators at academic and nonprofit research institutions who are engaged in funded research on aging.

Neural Tube Defect Resource (http://www.jax.org/ntd/index.html Supported by NICHD)
Distributes mouse models for neural tube defects.

Craniofacial Mutant Resource (http://www.jax.org/cranio/ Supported by NEI)
Provides the scientific community with mouse models for facial, dental, eye, ear and skull development research, as well as mouse models of human craniofacial syndromes.

National Primate Research Centers (http://www.ncrr.nih.gov/ncrrprog/cmpdir/PRIMATES.asp Supported by NCRR)
The centers' specialized resources are intended to support investigators who receive their primary research project funding from NIH, but they also may be used by investigators who are funded by other federal, state, and local agencies, as well as by research foundations and the private sector. Together the NPRCs have more than 20,000 animals representing more than 30 species of nonhuman primates, mostly macaques.

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Non-Mammalian

Model Organisms for Biomedical Research (http://www.nih.gov/science/models/)

Information about national and international activities and major resources that are being developed to facilitate biomedical research using mammalian and nonmammalian models that include mouse, rat, yeast, amoebae, yeast, round worm, fruit fly, zebrafish, and frog.

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Cells

Stem Cells

NIH Human Embryonic Stem Cell Registry (http://stemcells.nih.gov/ NIH)
The official NIH resource for stem cell research.

National Stem Cell Resource (http://stemcells.atcc.org/ Supported by NCRR)
Accessions, characterizes, expands, preserves and distributes nonhuman embryonal stem cells, as well as postnatally derived stem cells from a variety of strains and species. The resource also standardizes and optimizes methodology and develops new antibody and DNA reagents in an attempt to make procedures and reagents broadly applicable across a range of species and strains.

Adult Mesenchymal Stem Cell Resource (http://www.som.tulane.edu/gene_therapy/distribute.shtml Supported by NCRR)
Manufactures, characterizes, and distributes adult human stem cells for nonclinical research. In addition, manufactures and distributes well-characterized rat stem cells.

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Other Cells

National Cell Culture Center (http:www.nccc.com/ Supported by NCRR)
All basic research investigators are eligible to use this nonprofit national resource. The center provides large-scale production of mammalian cells-suspension culture (1 to 400 liters per day), anchorage-dependent culture (1 to 200 roller bottles per batch), insect/baculovirus culture (1 to 50 liters per day), purified monoclonal antibodies (10 mg to 100 grams per project), nonhybridoma cell-secreted proteins, and conditioned media.

Coriell Cell Repositories (http://locus.umdnj.edu/ccr/ Supported by NIA, NIGMS, NINDS, and others)

  • NIGMS Human Genetic Cell Repository (http://locus.umdnj.edu/nigms/)
    Supplies scientists with the materials for accelerating disease gene discovery. The resources available include highly-characterized, viable, and contaminant-free cell cultures and high quality, well-characterized DNA samples derived from these cultures, both subjected to rigorous quality control.

  • Aging Cell Repository (http://locus.umdnj.edu/nia/ Supported by NIA)
    Resource facilitating cellular and molecular research studies on the mechanisms of aging and the degenerative processes associated with it. The cells in this resource have been collected over the past three decades using strict diagnostic criteria and banked under the highest quality standards of cell culture. Scientists use the highly-characterized, viable, and contaminant-free cell cultures from this collection for research on such diseases as Alzheimer disease, progeria, Parkinsonism, Werner syndrome, and Cockayne syndrome.

  • NINDS Human Genetics Resource Center (http://locus.umdnj.edu/ninds/)
    A growing bank for human cells, DNA samples, clinical data, and information sources, to accelerate research on genetics of disorders of the nervous system.

Islet Cell Resource Centers (http://icr.coh.org/ Supported by NCRR, NIDDK and others)
An interactive group of 10 academic laboratories that:  provide pancreatic islets of cGMP-quality to eligible investigators for use in FDA-approved, IRB-approved transplantation protocols; optimize the harvest, purification, function, storage, and shipment of islets while developing tests that characterize the quality and predict the effectiveness of islets transplanted into patients with diabetes mellitus; and provide pancreatic islets for basic science studies.

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Reagents

NIH AIDS Research and Reference Reagent Program (http://www.aidsreagent.org/)
Unique worldwide resource of over 6,300 state-of-the art reagents for HIV and other pathogens. Many of these reagents are not commercially available.

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Databases

NCBI Databases (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Database/index.html)
Nucleotide, protein, structure, taxonomy, genome, expression, and chemical databases.

Oral Pathogen Sequence Databases (http://www.oralgen.lanl.gov/ Supported by NIDCR)
Molecular information pertaining to oral pathogens, bacterial and viral. Currently, the databases comprise Porphyromonas gingivalis, Streptococcus mutans, Fusobacterium nucleatum, Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans and Treponema denticola and Prevotella intermedia.

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Genetic and Genomic Resources

Quantitative PCR Primer Database (http://web.ncifcrf.gov/rtp/gel/primerdb/ Supported by NCI)
Information about primers and probes that can be used to quantitate human and mouse mRNA by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT–PCR) assays. All data has been gathered from published articles, cited in PubMed.

Center for Inherited Disease Research (http://www.cidr.jhmi.edu/ Supported by 12 NIH Institutes)
A centralized facility that provides genotyping and statistical genetics services for investigators seeking to identify genes that contribute to human disease. CIDR concentrates primarily on multifactorial hereditary disease although analysis of single gene disorders can also be accommodated. CIDR is available to all investigators through competitive peer review.

Pathogen Functional Genomics Resource Center (http://www.niaid.nih.gov/dmid/genomes/pfgrc/default.htm Supported by NIAID)
A centralized facility providing the research community with resources necessary to conduct functional genomics research on human pathogens and invertebrate vectors of infectious diseases. The PFGRC provides scientists with genomic resources and reagents such as microarrays, protein expression clones, genotyping and bioinformatics services.

Mammalian Gene Collection (http://mgc.nci.nih.gov/ Trans NIH)
Full-length open reading frame (FL-ORF) clones for human, mouse, and rat genes.

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NIH Clinical and Population Trials

Database of Longitudinal Studies (http://www.nia.nih.gov/ResearchInformation/ScientificResources/LongitudinalStudies.htm Supported by NIA)
A database of existing sources of longitudinal data on aging (e.g., ongoing longitudinal cohorts, longitudinal data sets, biospecimen repositories) for facilitating future research on aging changes across the lifespan. The longitudinal studies, data sets and repositories included in this database encompass a wide range of age groups (childhood to old age), studies in minority populations, as well as sources of longitudinal data existing in the United States and abroad. 

Sample Recruitment Materials (http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/resources/recruit/index.htm Supported by NHLBI)
Examples of recruitment materials.

 

Last reviewed on: 06/16/2008

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