The PATRIC Bioinformatics Resource Center: expanding data and analysis capabilities

James J. Davis(Argonne National Laboratory), Alice R. Wattam(Argonne National Laboratory), Ramy K. Aziz(Cairo University), Thomas Brettin(Argonne National Laboratory), Ralph Butler(Argonne National Laboratory), Rory Butler(Argonne National Laboratory), Philippe Chlenski, Neal Conrad(Argonne National Laboratory), Allan W. Dickerman(Biocom), Emily Dietrich(Argonne National Laboratory), Joseph L. Gabbard(Virginia Tech), Svetlana Gerdes, Andrew Guard(University of Chicago), Ronald W. Kenyon(Biocom), Dustin Machi(Biocom), Chunhong Mao(Biocom), Dan Murphy-Olson(Argonne National Laboratory), Marcus Nguyen(Argonne National Laboratory), Eric K. Nordberg(Virginia Tech), Gary J. Olsen(University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), Robert Olson(Argonne National Laboratory), Jamie Overbeek(Argonne National Laboratory), Ross Overbeek(University of Chicago), Bruce Parrello(Argonne National Laboratory), Gordon D. Pusch, Maulik Shukla(Argonne National Laboratory), Chris S. Thomas(University of Chicago), Margo VanOeffelen, Veronika Vonstein, Andrew Warren(Biocom), Fangfang Xia(Argonne National Laboratory), Dawen Xie(Biocom), Hyunseung Yoo(Argonne National Laboratory), Rick Stevens(Argonne National Laboratory)
Nucleic Acids Research
October 12, 2019
Cited by 958Open Access
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Abstract

The PathoSystems Resource Integration Center (PATRIC) is the bacterial Bioinformatics Resource Center funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (https://www.patricbrc.org). PATRIC supports bioinformatic analyses of all bacteria with a special emphasis on pathogens, offering a rich comparative analysis environment that provides users with access to over 250 000 uniformly annotated and publicly available genomes with curated metadata. PATRIC offers web-based visualization and comparative analysis tools, a private workspace in which users can analyze their own data in the context of the public collections, services that streamline complex bioinformatic workflows and command-line tools for bulk data analysis. Over the past several years, as genomic and other omics-related experiments have become more cost-effective and widespread, we have observed considerable growth in the usage of and demand for easy-to-use, publicly available bioinformatic tools and services. Here we report the recent updates to the PATRIC resource, including new web-based comparative analysis tools, eight new services and the release of a command-line interface to access, query and analyze data.


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