Pubmed is a comprehensive literature database of life sciences and biomedical information. It covers the fields of medicine, nursing, dentistry, veterinary medicine and the health care system. As perhaps a side effect of covering these fields, it also manages to cover nearly all of biology, even covering fields with no direct medical connection, such as molecular evolution.
GenBank® is the NIH genetic sequence database, an annotated collection of all publicly available DNA sequences (Nucleic Acids Research 2006 Jan 1;34(Database issue):D16-20). There are approximately 65,369,091,950 bases in 61,132,599 sequence records in the traditional GenBank divisions and 80,369,977,826 bases in 17,960,667 sequence records in the WGS division as of August 2006.
DDBJ (DNA Data Bank of Japan) began DNA data bank activities in earnest in 1986 at the National Institute of Genetics (NIG).
DDBJ has been functioning as the international nucleotide sequence database in collaboration with EBI/EMBL and NCBI/GenBank.
DNA sequence records the organismic evolution more directly than other biological materials and ,thus, is invaluable not only for research in life sciences, but also human welfare in general. The databases are, so to speak, a common treasure of human beings. With this in mind, we make the databases online accessible to anyone in the world.
The Alzheimer Research Forum, a dynamic online scientific knowledge base, reports on the latest Alzheimer's scientific research and develops databases of genes, scientific articles, animal models, antibodies, medications, grants, research jobs, and more.
AbMiner is a tool that allows users to search for appropriate, commercially available antibodies for research purposes, and to match each antibody to its respective genomic identifiers.