There are two major ways of publishing scientific data and results: (1) the standard peer-reviewed paper, which dates back to volume 1 of the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society in 1665; and (2) online distribution of data, resources, and software using the Internet that dates back a mere 21 years to the first Web site at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) established by Tim Berners-Lee. [FIGURE 1A OMITTED] Today online resources for sharing scientific work abound. The National Library of Medicine's repository, PubMed, captures more than 21 million citations for biomedical literature. NIAAA can lay claim to the first URL listed in PubMed: The Portable Dictionary of the Mouse Genome (Williams 1994). This site--now called GeneNetwork.org--has been supported by NIAAA for more than a decade as part of the Integrative Neuroscience of Initiative on Alcoholism (INIA). There are hundreds of sophisticated Web services and resources that can be exploited by students and researchers interested in alcoholism and other substance use disorders. These resources can be used like publications, but a better way to think about them is as a second "dry" laboratory in which it is possible to carry out experiments and to either generate or test ideas by reusing data that often have been rescued from the classic literature. Below is a short list of both well-known and more esoteric resources, many of which have been supported by NIAAA, that can be used as a complement to the set of reviews in this special issue. There are two major categories of sites in this list: (1) those that provide deep data along with software that can be used to perform analysis, (2) those that can provide physical resources such as samples, clones, and powerful experimental murine models. The first category is easy to browse directly from the links below; whereas the second category is geared more to students and scientists in need of a jump-start to understand the function of specific genes. Category 1: Web Resources for Online Analysis of the Genetics of Alcoholism and More GeneNetwork (www.genenetwork.org): This is a comprehensive resource for learning about genetics, but users may need to read the help files, FAQs, or one of the references (Chesler et al., 2003; Grisham et al., 2010, www.lifescied. org/content/9/2/98.full.pdf). GeneNetwork is one of an interlinked trio of sites built up by NIAAA (GeneWeaver and WebGestalt are the other two) to house extensive data for human, monkey, rat, mouse, and fruit fly. It includes hundreds of data sets on responses to alcohol, particularly in a family of mice called the BXDs. Data are linked with powerful gene analysis and mapping tools. Think of it as a free suite of genetics and statistics programs that happen to be loaded with genetic and genomic data sets, along with complimentary data on biological responses to alcohol and many other drugs (Philip et al., 2010). (For more information, see figure 1A and B) [FIGURE 1B OMITTED] GeneWeaver (www.geneweaver.org): This is another NIAAA-funded project that offers a powerful tool for the integrative analysis of collections of lists of genes and their functional relationships (Baker et al., 2012). This resource-and-analysis tool provides a way of making sense of a large group of related genomic studies. Excellent user interface and tutorials make this a starting point for those with large gene expression data sets. It also is a straightforward of performing analyses of many curated gene sets in the GeneWeaver database (see figure 2). WebGestalt (http://bioinfo.vanderbilt.edu/webgestalt): Like GeneWeaver this is a sophisticated tool for the analysis of sets of genes. It includes species as diverse as yeast, worms, and humans (Duncan et al., 2010). WebGestalt often is used to perform pathway analysis and gene ontology analysis--a computationally demanding categorization of genes based on their known functions. …
[1]
William Grisham,et al.
Teaching Bioinformatics and Neuroinformatics by Using Free Web-based Tools
,
2010,
CBE life sciences education.
[2]
Lawrence E Hunter,et al.
The PhenoGen Informatics website: tools for analyses of complex traits
,
2006,
BMC Genetics.
[3]
Carol J. Bult,et al.
Mouse Phenome Database (MPD)
,
2011,
Nucleic Acids Res..
[4]
Jintao Wang,et al.
Genetic correlates of gene expression in recombinant inbred strains
,
2007,
Neuroinformatics.
[5]
Michael A. Langston,et al.
GeneWeaver: a web-based system for integrative functional genomics
,
2011,
Nucleic Acids Res..
[6]
E. Chesler,et al.
High-throughput behavioral phenotyping in the expanded panel of BXD recombinant inbred strains
,
2010,
Genes, brain, and behavior.
[7]
Bing Zhang,et al.
WebGestalt2: an updated and expanded version of the Web-based Gene Set Analysis Toolkit
,
2010,
BMC Bioinformatics.
[8]
R. W. Williams,et al.
The portable dictionary of the mouse genome: a personal database for gene mapping and molecular biology
,
1994,
Mammalian Genome.
[9]
An-Yuan Guo,et al.
ERGR: An ethanol-related gene resource
,
2008,
Nucleic Acids Res..