Category Resource Links
Here are some resource links for the categories that you find to the left. We feel that the closer you look at these burgeoning industries the more you will see that TechDomainSales.Com has some of the very best domains available for them.
A resource containing news, reviews, abstracts, book chapters, reports, jobs, diary events, a directory relating to agricultural biotechnology, including transgenics, in vitro culture and molecular genetics of plants.
Cartagen Molecular Systems, a new resource for plant biologists to facilitate genomic and proteomic research, offers competitively priced products formatted for user convenience and backed by hands on experience.
The CESG is a structural genomics project focused on Arabidopsis thaliana. The Center aims to develop novel methodology to increase the efficiency of high throughput protein structure determination. The CESG is actively soliciting requests from the research community regarding target selection. If there is a 3-dimensional protein structure you would like to see solved, contact us.
Antibody web shop for phytobiology and plant sciences. Commercial antibodies for research in photosynthesis, respiration and many more new products to come.
Gramene is a comparative genome mapping database for grasses. Both automatic and manual curation are performed to combine and interrelate information on genomic and EST sequences; genetic, physical, and sequence-based maps; proteins; molecular markers; mutant phenotypes and QTL; and publications. Rice genomic sequence serves as a common demoninator for mapping and comparing sequence across grass species. Comparative maps of rice, maize, sorghum, barley, wheat and oat are anchored to each other by a set of curated correspondences as well as by sequence similarity of ESTs and genomic markers. Controlled vocabularies (ontologies) are used to annotate proteins and phenotypes, which permits users to query and make comparisons across taxonomic groups.
The site provides an introduction to agricultural biotechnology as well as a list of news items and events. In addition, the site contains an e-mail forum on biotechnology in food and agriculture, a biotechnology glossary and links to other relevant sites. It also presents an overview of FAO’s activities in the area, including the organization’s statement on biotechnology. Apart from English, it is also available in Arabic, Chinese, French and Spanish.
Bring your students up-to-the-minute with labs, lectures, and bioinformatics exercises from the Dolan DNA Learning Center at Cold Spring Harbor Labs. Three faculty training workshops in 2005. Visit http://www.dnalc.org and http://www.greenomes.org
Here you will find documents and searchable databases pertaining to the development, testing and regulatory review of genetically modified plants, animals and microorganisms within the US and abroad.
LifeSciencesWorld.com is a comprehensive directory of international links covering the fields of biotechnologies and life sciences, as well as a Biotechnology Career Center and a Biotech News Center.
Global supplier of gene function information in specific model and target organisms. Targeting Arabidopsis thalania, rice, and six filamentous fungi. GeneFunction Factory™ is designed to be an integrated, rapid, industrial scale laboratory through which we can discover and modify genes, measure the consequences of the modifications, and reliably determine the function of those genes.
With a rapid expansion and complexity of plant genomic databases, there is a growing need for a unified common platform that would allow for cross-database communication. One of the current obstacles lies in a variable terminology that is used to describe plant structure and development in each database. Creating a defined generic set of terms that would describe flowering plant anatomy and development can solve this problem. Such a common vocabulary (ontology) would integrate existing species-specific vocabulary terms into unified flowering-plants ontologies, providing semantic framework for cross-database queries, and allowing cross-species comparisons. The Plant Ontology Consortium (POC) (www.plantontology.org) is to develop a common set of controlled vocabularies to describe anatomical and developmental stages in both experimentally and agronomically important species. Thus providing a comprehensive framework for comparative studies of plant genomics across different taxa.
Site provides information on frequently asked questions about biotechnology and other agricultural topics with links to the scientific literature. Other resources include talks and downloadable slides and powerpoint presentations.