From owner-acedb@net.bio.net Sun Nov 03 22:00:00 1996
Path: biosci!agate!howland.erols.net!EU.net!main.Germany.EU.net!fu-berlin.de!news.belwue.de!News.Uni-Marburg.DE!usenet
From: Michael Otto <otto@Mailer.Uni-Marburg.DE>
Newsgroups: bionet.software.acedb
Subject: webace...
Date: Mon, 04 Nov 1996 11:05:18 +0100
Organization: MZ fuer Humangenetik
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Hi outthere,
is there anyone who has an ACEDB (v4.3) to WWW Server running ?

I tried to install all the stuff following the instructions on the 
document pages (http://probe.nalusda.gov:8000/acedocs/index.html)
to configure JD Barnett's webace on our machine (SUN SparcStation 20)

The installation process seems to be correct, (CGI ist installed, 
perl5.003 is used as perl interpreter, aceclient and aceserver are 
installed) but I just can ask our database for the model structures.

All the other stuff seems not to work in the moment (webace starts with
a pull-down-(able) menu to choose a database, but pressing continue
pop-up the error message (404 Not Found) with the text:

  the requested URL /cgi-bin/POST was not found on this server


(...)

that's the point where my wisdom ends.

(help, please)


  Michael Otto

From owner-acedb@net.bio.net Wed Nov 06 22:00:00 1996
Newsgroups: bionet.software.acedb
Path: biosci!daresbury!nntp-trd.UNINETT.no!nntp.uio.no!news.cais.net!in1.nntp.cais.net!newshub.sdsu.edu!news.sgi.com!howland.erols.net!netcom.com!bks
From: bks@netcom.com (Bradley K. Sherman)
Subject: FAQus Fugit
Message-ID: <bksE0I9Fr.920@netcom.com>
Organization: DNA + Sunlight
Date: Thu, 7 Nov 1996 14:55:03 GMT
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Sender: bks@netcom20.netcom.com


David Matthews has kindly consented to take over curatorship
of the ACEDB FAQ.  I have taken a new job which prevents me
from giving the FAQ adequate attention.  I know that Dave's
attention to detail and superior knowledge of biology will
enhance the document.

The contact e-mail address (acedbfaq@s27w007.pswfs.gov)
remains functional and correspondence to it will be
handled by Dave.

    Later,
    --bks


From owner-acedb@net.bio.net Wed Nov 06 22:00:00 1996
Path: biosci!daresbury!not-for-mail
From: mieg@kaa.crbm.cnrs-mop.fr (Danielle et jean Thierry-Mieg)
Newsgroups: bionet.software.acedb
Subject: faq
Date: 7 Nov 1996 17:04:00 -0000
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Sender: lpddist@mserv1.dl.ac.uk
Distribution: bionet
Message-ID: <55t4q0$pjk@mserv1.dl.ac.uk>
Original-To: acedb@dl.ac.uk


We are very happy that Dave is willing to continue the very
good work of Brad and send all our best wishes to both.

Danielle et Jean

From owner-acedb@net.bio.net Fri Nov 08 22:00:00 1996
Path: biosci!nntp.ucr.edu!info.ucla.edu!csulb.edu!news.sgi.com!news.mathworks.com!newsfeed.internetmci.com!newsfeed.dacom.co.kr!usenet.kornet.nm.kr!agate!overload.lbl.gov!acedbfaq
From: acedbfaq@s27w007.pswfs.gov (ACEDB FAQ Curator)
Newsgroups: bionet.software.acedb,news.answers
Subject: ACEDB Genome Database Software FAQ
Followup-To: bionet.software.acedb
Date: 9 Nov 1996 21:46:39 GMT
Organization: Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Berkeley CA
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Summary: Frequently Asked Questions about finding and getting
 started with the genome database software ACEDB.
Xref: biosci bionet.software.acedb:1020 news.answers:79182

Archive-name: acedb-faq
Last-modified: 9 Nov 96
Version: 1.31

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

ACEDB FAQ

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Curated by: Dave Matthews
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Frequently Asked Questions about ACEDB

   * Q0 : What is ACEDB?
   * Q1 : What is the current version of ACEDB?
   * Q2 : ! What hardware/software do I need to run ACEDB?
   * Q3 : ! Where can I get ACEDB?
   * Q4 : ! What ACEDB databases exist?
   * Q5 : What documentation exists for ACEDB?
   * Q6 : ! What other resources are available for ACEDB?
   * Q7 : How should ACEDB be cited?
   * Q8 : Is ACEDB object-oriented?
   * Q9 : How does one get on/off the ACEDB announcements mailing list?
   * Q10 : When and where is the next ACEDB Workshop?
   * Q11 : Who prepared this document & where is the current version?

Questions marked with '+' are new, those with '!' have substantially changed
answers.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Q0: What is ACEDB?

A0:

ACEDB is an acronym for A Caenorhabditis elegans Database. It can refer to a
database and data concerning the nematode C. elegans, or to the database
software alone. This document is concerned primarily with the latter
meaning. ACEDB is being adapted by many groups to organize molecular biology
data about the genomes of diverse species [Q4 gives contact information].

ACEDB allows for automatic cross-referencing of items during loading and
allows for hypertextual navigation of the links using a graphical user
interface and mouse. Certain special purpose graphical displays have been
integrated into the software. These reflect the needs of molecular
biologists in constructing genetic and physical maps of genomes.

ACEDB was written and developed by Richard Durbin (MRC LMB Cambridge,
England) and Jean Thierry-Mieg (CNRS, Montpellier, France), beginning circa
1990. It is written in the C programming language and uses the X11 windowing
system to provide a platform independent graphical user interface. The
source code is publicly available [See Q3]. Durbin & Thierry-Mieg continue
to develop the system, with contributions from other groups including
Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory and the Integrated Genomic Database (IGD)
project headed by Otto Ritter.

A description by Durbin & Thierry-Mieg: ACEDB does not use an underlying
relational database schema, but a system we wrote ourselves in which data
are stored in objects that belong in classes. This is nevertheless a general
database management system using caches, session control, and a powerful
query language. Typical objects are clones, genes, alleles, papers,
sequences, etc. Each object is stored as a tree, following a hierarchical
structure for the class (called the "model"). Maps are derived from data
stored in tree objects, but precomputed and stored as tables for efficiency.
The system of models allows flexibility and efficiency of storage --missing
data are not stored. A major advantage is that the models can be extended
and refined without invalidating an existing database. Comments can be added
to any node of an object.

Return to List of Questions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Q1: What is the current version of ACEDB?

A1:

(This answer refers to the software, not the C. elegans data.)

Current Unix version is 4_3 (as of May 1996) and is identical to the test
version test.4_3i.

A Macintosh version is available as version 4.1b1.

A Windows '95/NT version is available as version beta960927.

To retrieve the software see Q3.
To be kept informed of new releases see Q9.

Return to List of Questions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Q2: What hardware/software do I need to run ACEDB?

A2:

The software is available as source code, so you may be able to get it
working on any machine, with effort. It is also available in binary
(pre-compiled) format for a variety of machines. To retrieve the software
see Q3.

   * Unix:
        o Sun/SunOS 4.x
        o Sun/Solaris
        o DEC DECstation3100, 5100 etc.
        o DEC Alpha/OSF-1
        o Silicon Graphics Iris series 4, 5, 6
        o IBM RS-6000
        o PC 386/486/Pentium with Linux
        o NEC EWS4800
        o NeXT: contact Patrick Phillips at University of Texas, NeXTmail:
          patrick@wbar.uta.edu email: phil@decster.uta.edu
        o There exist, or have existed, ports onto Alliant, Hewlett-
          Packard, Convex. You may have to contact the developer responsible
          for the port to make these real.
   * New! Windows '95/NT
   * Macintosh:
     [Contributed by Frank Eeckman] Macace is distributed as a
     self-extracting archive that contains the application, the wspec files,
     and a fully up to date database. macace 3.0 is available with an
     updated 21bdb database. Please send all questions/bug reports to
     eeckman@llnl.gov A native powerPC version is available as well. Macace
     needs a macintosh with > 16 MBytes of RAM, and a 17" color monitor is
     preferred. System 7 or greater is required. For the multimedia
     extensions Quicktime 1.0 is required. Please add your name to our
     mailing list by sending email to eeckman@llnl.gov. It is our belief
     that for cost savings a powerPC mac will beat the advertised
     linux-intel combination. Macace is fully compatible with xace, but
     includes some multimedia extensions (picture and movie support) not
     found in the unix versions.

Return to List of Questions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Q3: Where can I get ACEDB?

A3:

Source code and Unix binaries are available in the following anonymous ftp
sites:

   * lirmm.lirmm.fr in pub/acedb
   * ftp.sanger.ac.uk in pub/acedb
   * ncbi.nlm.nih.gov in repository/acedb
   * bioinformatics.weizmann.ac.il in pub/databases/acedb

Linux binaries in ELF and a.out format, from Jeff Bryer:

   * ncbi.nlm.nih.gov in repository/acedb
   * bioinformatics.weizmann.ac.il in pub/databases/acedb

NEC EWS4800 binaries:

   * http://www.labs.nec.co.jp/freesoft/freesofte.html

New! Windows '95/NT 3.51, from Richard Bruskiewich:

   * ftp.sanger.ac.uk in pub/winace

MacAce, from Frank Eeckman, Cyrus Harmon and Richard Durbin:

   * genome.lbl.gov in pub/macace
   * ncbi.nlm.nih.gov in repository/acedb/macace

Return to List of Questions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Q4: What ACEDB databases exist?

A4:

In alphabetic order by Database name

[Curators, please submit changes as new paragraphs]

Database : AaeDB
Species : Aedes aegypti (Mosquito)
Last_update : December 1994
ACEDB_version : 3.0
WWW : http://klab.agsci.colostate.edu/
Curator : Dennis Knudson, dknudson@lamar.colostate.edu
Curator : Martin Ferguson, martinf@lamar.colostate.edu
Co-Curator : Dave Severson, dave@aedes.vetsci.wisc.edu
Co-Curator : Leonard Munstermann, munst@biomed.med.yale.edu
Contact : aaedbmgr@klab.agsci.colostate.edu

Database : AAtDB
Species : Arabidopsis thaliana
Current version : 3-5
Last_update : August 1995
PI : J. Michael Cherry
Curator : David Flanders
Contact : arab-curator@genome.stanford.edu
Availability : UNIX and Macintosh versions via anonymous ftp
FTP : genome-ftp.stanford.edu in arabidopsis/aatdb
FTP : ncbi.nlm.nih.gov in repository/aatdb
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/aatdb
Gopher : genome-gopher.stanford.edu/11/Arabidopsis
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://genome-www.stanford.edu
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/

Database : AboutDB
Curator : Staffan Bergh, staffan@biochem.kth.se
Subject : ACEDB itself (meta-meta-metadata)
ACEDB_version: 3.0
Last_update : July 1995
WWW : http://www.biochem.kth.se/AboutDB.html

Database : ACeDB
Species : Caenorhabditis elegans
Current version: 4-8
Curator : Jean Thierry-Mieg, mieg@kaa.crbm.cnrs-mop.fr
Curator : Richard Durbin, rd@sanger.ac.uk
Curator : Sylvia Martinelli, sylvia@sanger.ac.uk
Last_update : August 1995
Availability: Unix and Macintosh versions via anonymous ftp
FTP: USA - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov in repository/acedb
FTP: England - ftp.sanger.ac.uk in pub/acedb
FTP: France - lirmm.lirmm.fr in genome/acedb
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/other/

Database : AGsDB (A Genus species Database)
Species : Aspergillus nidulans
Species : Neurospora crassa
Species : Bos taurus (cow)
Species : Homo sapiens anchor loci
Species : Gossypium hirsutum (cotton)
Species : Neurospora crassa
Species : Homologs of Aspergillus cell cycle loci for budding and fission
yeast
Curator : Leland Ellis, leland@straylight.tamu.edu
Last_update : March 1994
ACeDB_version : 3.0
Subject: Contains extensions to the Human C21 Models to provide for multiple
species, and queries between species via Homologs (e.g., cell cycle loci
with links via Homologs between Aspergillus and budding C. cerevisiae) and
fission (S. pombe yeast); interacting loci via defined Interactions for each
locus Revision : AAnDB for Aspergillus nidulans and ABtDB for Bos taurus
(cow) have been folded into AGsDB, and are not being developed futher as
individual species databases.
WWW : http://keck.tamu.edu/cgi/agsdb/agsdbserver.html FTP:
ftp://keck.tamu.edu/pub/agsdb/agsdb1_0_acedb3_0_solaris2.3.tar.Z

Database : Alfagenes
Species : Medicago sativa (alfalfa)
Curator : D. Z. Skinner, dzolek@ksu.ksu.edu
Telephone : (913) 532-7247
ACEDB_version : 3.0
Last_Update : July 1995
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/alfagenes
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/

Database : BeanGenes
Species : Phaseolus and Vigna
Curator : Phillip E. McClean, mcclean@beangenes.cws.ndsu.nodak.edu
ACEDB_version : 4.1
Last_updated : September 1995
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/

Database : BrassicaDB Species : Brassica napus (Canola/Oilseed Rape) and its
parental diploid species
ACEDB_version : 4.3
Description : Genetic maps of Brassica napus, QTL analyses for agronomic
traits, literature references and B. napus-specific DNA sequences will be
incorporated. We aim to integrate with B. napus genetic maps developed
elsewhere and to produce a Java interface that will link BrassicaDB with the
AAtDB (Arabidopsis thaliana) database through gene orthologies that are
becoming established between these closely related plant genomes.
PI : Martin Trick, Martin.Trick@bbsrc.ac.uk
Curator/Developer : Mazda Hewitt, Mazda.Hewitt@bbsrc.ac.uk
Last_update : Under development
WWW : http://nasc.nottm.ac.uk

Database : ChlamyDB
Species : Chlamydomonas
Curator : Elizabeth Harris
Contact : chlamy@acpub.duke.edu
ACEDB_version : 3.0
Data_version : 1.2
Last_update : August 1995
Availability : Macintosh and UNIX versions via anonymous ftp
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/chlamydb
Gopher : ftp.duke.edu/11/pub/chlamy
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/

Database : CIMMYT (Wheat International Nursery Data)
Species : Triticum spp.
ACEDB_version : 4.0
Last_update : September 1995
Curator : Hector Sanchez, hsanchez@cimmyt.mx
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/cimmyt
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/related/

Database : CoolGenes
Species : Cool Season Food Legumes; Pisum, Lens, Cicer, Lathyrus, Vicia faba
Curator : Fred Muehlbauer, muehlbau@wsu.edubr> ACEDB_version : 3.0
Last_update : January 1996
Gopher : gopher://probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/coolgenes/
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/

Database : CottonDB
Species : Gossypium hirsutum (cotton) and related species
PI : Russell J. Kohel (rjk0339@acs.tamu.edu), USDA-ARS, Southern Crops
Research Laboratory, 2765 F&B Road, College Station, Texas 77845
Curator : Gerard R. Lazo, lazo@tamu.edu
Curator : Sridhar Madhavan, msridhar@tamu.edu
Phone : 409-260-9311
Fax : 409-260-9333
Last_update : January 1995 (version 95.1)
ACEDB_version : 3.0
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/cottondb
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/
Data_submission_form : http://algodon.tamu.edu/

Database: Cruzdb
Species: Trypanosoma cruzi
PI: Wim Degrave
Last_updated: In development
ACEDB_version: 4.3
Curator: Martin Aslett
Contact: Martin Aslett, aslett@ebi.ac.uk
FTP: (when available) ftp.ebi.ac.uk/pub/databases/parasites/cruzi/
WWW: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/parasites/parasite-genome.html

Database : CSNDB
Focus : Cell Signaling Networks
Species : human
Curator : Takako Igarashi, taka@nihs.go.jp
Curator : Tsuguchika Kaminuma, kaminuma@nihs.go.jp
Assistant_Curator : Masumi Yukawa, yukawa@nihs.go.jp
Assistant_Curator : Shikiko Hasegawa, shasegaw@nihs.go.jp
Contact : Takako Igarashi, taka@nihs.go.jp
ACeDB_version : 4.1
Data : molecular data of signal molecules, molecular data of signal
transductions, signal transduction pathways, domain structure and function
of signal molecules, and three dimensional structures of signal molecules.
Availability : CSNDB is on WWW. WWW-browser is required to attach molecular
viewer RasMol ( ftp: colonsay.dcs.ed.ac.uk ) for displaying three
dimensional structure of protein. WWW : http://geo.nihs.go.jp/csndb.html

Database : Cyanobase
Species : Cyanobacterium synechocytstis sp. Strain PCC680
Last_update : September 1996
Developer : Nobuyuki Miyajima miyajima@kazusa.or.jp
FTP : ftp://ftp.kazusa.or.jp/pub/acedb/
WWW : http://www.kazusa.or.jp/cyanobase/
Remark : WWW interface Uses Java enhanced clickable maps.

Database : EthnobotDB (worldwide plant uses)
Species : wide range of plant species
ACEDB_version : 4.0
Last_update : June 1995
Comment : Converted to ACEDB from the original SQL database.
Curator : Stephen M. Beckstrom-Sternberg, peosb@ars-grin.gov
Curator : James A. Duke, ngrljd@ars-grin.gov
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/related/

Database: FilDB
Species: Filarial nematodes
PI: Mark Blaxter
Last_updated: In development
ACEDB_version: 4.3
Curator: Martin Aslett
Contact: Mark Blaxter, mark.blaxter@ed.ac.uk
Contact: Martin Aslett, aslett@ebi.ac.uk
FTP: (when available) ftp.ebi.ac.uk/pub/databases/parasites/Brugia
WWW: http://helios.bto.ed.ac.uk/mbx/fgn/filgen.html
WWW: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/parasites/parasite-genome.html

Database : FoodplantDB (Native American Food Plants)
Species : Over 1,100 plant species
ACEDB_version : 4.0
Last_update : May 1995
Curator : Stephen M. Beckstrom-Sternberg, peosb@ars-grin.gov
Curator : James A. Duke, ngrljd@ars-grin.gov
Comment : Converted to ACEDB from ORACLE.
Comment : Data originally from a publication by Yanovsky, Elias. 1936. Food
Plants of the North American Indians. USDA Miscellaneous Publication Number
237.
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/related/

Database : GrainGenes
Species : Wheat, barley, oats, sugarcane, relatives
Curator : David E. Matthews, matthews@greengenes.cit.cornell.edu
PI : Olin D. Anderson, oandersn@pw.usda.gov
ACEDB_version : 4_3
Data_version : 1.6
Last_update : April 1996
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/graingenes
Gopher : greengenes.cit.cornell.edu/
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7002
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/
WWW : http://wheat.pw.usda.gov/graingenes.html

Database : IGD (Integrated Genomic Database)
Species : Homo sapiens
Subject : Chromosome 21
Availability : September 1994 by ftp, on-line server October 1994
Contact : Otto Ritter, o.ritter@dkfz-heidelberg.de
Contact : Jean Thierry-Mieg, mieg@kaa.cnrs-mop.fr
Contact : Nicole Creau-Goldberg, creau@arthur.citi2.fr
Contact : Jean-Maurice Delabar, delabar@arthur.citi2.fr
WWW : http://moulon.inra.fr/acedb/igd.html
Description : IGD (Integrated Genomic Database) aims to integrate multiple
public general molecular biology and human genome specific databases into
single logical database with unified interface to existing analysis tools.
From data produced by the 4th International Workshop on Chromosome 21
(Genomics,1993,18,735-744) and from data provided by or taken from the
following databases and data repositories: GDB, OMIM, EMBL, CEPH, Genethon,
UKProbeBank, and RLDB.

Database : IXDB (Integrated X chromosome DataBase)
Species: Homo sapiens
Subject: Chromosome X
Acedb_version : 4.1
Data: The YAC map constructed by the Max-Planck-Institut fuer Molekulare
Genetik in Berlin, with all the attached experimental data necessary to
reconstruct the map. Information on each of 9000 YAC clones mapped to the X
chromosome, and constituting the YAC collection assembled with clone sets
from 14 different laboratories worldwide.
Latest_release:March 1996
Curator: Hugues Roest Crollius, roest@mpimg-berlin-dahlem.mpg.de
Contact: Ulf Leser, leser@mpimg-berlin-dahlem.mpg.de
PI: Hans Lehrach
FTP: ftp.mpimg-berlin-dahlem.mpg.de in directory pub/lehrach/x-map
WWW: http://www.mpimg-berlin-dahlem.mpg.de/~xteam

Database: Leishdb
Species: Leishmania major, L. infantum, L. peruviana, L. donovani and others
PI: Jennie Blackwell
PI: Al Ivens
Last_updated: October 1996
ACEDB_version: 4.3
Curator: Martin Aslett
Contact: Martin Aslett, aslett@ebi.ac.uk
FTP: ftp.ebi.ac.uk/pub/databases/parasites/Leish
WWW: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/parasites/parasite-genome.html
WWW: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/parasites/leish/leishpage.html (in development)

Database : LIGM-DB
Curator : Veronique Giudicelli
Focus : genetic and physical mapping of loci of Immunoglobulins and Tcell
receptors
PI : Marie-Paule Lefranc
Contact : Veronique Giudicelli LIGM IGMM UMR CNRS 9942 BP 5051 Rte de Mende
34000 Montpellier giudi@ligm.crbm.cnrs-mop.fr

Database : MaizeDB
Species : Zea mays L. ssp. mays and related species
Latest_release : April 1995
Acedb_version : 3.3
Comment : MaizeDB is a periodically extracted ACeDB front end for the Maize
Genome Database, MaizeDB, a SYBASE database, implemented using Genera
software, developed by Stan Letovsky.
Comment : Genera provides (1) up-to-the-minute form internet access to
SYBASE databases, both for query (WWW and APT) and data entry (APT only);
(2) database design alterations by systems administrators; (3) gopher file
extraction.
Comment: MaizeDB uses WWW record-to-record hard-links to 16 external
databases for (1) annotated sequences: GenBank, dbEST, GenoBase, PIR,
SwissProt, Prosite, ENZYME; (2) other species genome information:
AAtDB(Arabidopsis), RiceGenes, GrainGenes, SaachDB (yeast), CGSC(E. coli),
XLocus, RiceGenes, GrainGenes (3) germplasm: GRIN.
Data : Over 100,000 records include: 6513 mapped loci (located to chromosome
or better) including 1081 mapped genes and 1937 mapped probed sites (gene
candidates); 2448 probes; 2460 map scores; 1551 gel patterns
(Probe/Enzyme/Stock); 8777 stocks; 18,100 Variations (alleles, DNA
polymorphisms, rearrangements, etc); 596 phenotypes; 317 traits; 715 gene
products; 6158 bibliographic references; 2200 researchers with addresses.
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/maizedb
Gopher : gopher.agron.missouri.edu
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
Telnet : telnet teosinte.agron.missouri.edu login as guest, use password:
corncob
WWW : http://www.agron.missouri.edu/top.html
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/
WWW Genera information : http://gdbdoc.gdb.org/letovsky/genera/genera.html
Funding : MaizeDB USDA/ARS to E. Coe
Funding : Genera NSF BIR 92-01652 to S. Letovsky and M. Berlyn
Curator/PI : Ed Coe, ed@teosinte.agron.missouri.edu
Curator : Mary Polacco, maryp@teosinte.agron.missouri.edu
Assoc Curator : Pat Byrne, byrne@teosinte.agron.missouri.edu QTL data
Assoc Curator : Georgia Davis, gdavis@teosinte.agron.missouri.edu Map data
Assoc Curator : Marty Sachs, Maize Stock Center, msachs@uiuc.edu Genetic
Stock data
Assoc Curator : Christiane Fauron, FAURON@GENE1.med.utah.edu Mitochondrion
genome
Assoc Curator : Carolyn Wetzel, cmwetzel@iastate.edu Chloroplast genome
Assoc Curator : Steve Rodermel, S1SRR@ISUVAX.IASTATE.EDU Chloroplast genome
Design : Stan Letovsky, letovsky@gdb.org
Design : Mary Berlyn, mary@fetalpig.biology.yale.edu
Systems Manager : Denis Hancock, dhancock@teosinte.agron.missouri.edu
Contact : db_request@teosinte.agron.missouri.edu
Last_update : 11 April 1995

Database : Mendel (plant wide gene names)
Species : wide range of plant species
Subject : standardized designations for sequenced genes
Comment : The purpose is to provide a common system of nomenclature for
substantially similar genes across the plant kingdom. Mendel is maintained
by the Commission on Plant Gene Nomenclature.
ACEDB_version : 4.0
Last_update : July 1995
Curator : Carl Price, price@mbcl.rutgers.edu
Curator : Ellen Reardon, reardon@mbcl.rutgers.edu
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/related/

Database : Millet Genes
Species : Pennisetum Glaucum (Pearl Millet)
ACEDB_version : 4.1
Availablity : Local
Curator : Matt Couchman, couchman@bbsrc.ac.uk
Curator : Katrien Devos, devos@bbsrc.ac.uk

DataBase : Mousedb
Species : Mus Musculus
Species : Homo Sapiens
ACEDB_version : 3.0 with extensions to define and display cytogenetic data.
Description : Mouse genome data from the published literature, including
mouse genes with phenotypic effects, chromosome anomalies, imprinted regions
and man-mouse homologies with associated pathological disorders. The maps
are consensus ones. They use data, such as the HIS and anomaly data, to show
alignments between the genetic and cytogenetic maps.
Curator : Rachael Selley, rselley@har-rbu.mrc.ac.uk
PI : Mary Lyon
PI : Jo Peters
Availability : Mousedb is available publicly from the UK HGMP Resource
Centre's computing service via the INTERNET. For user id. please contact
Administration, HGMP Resource Centre, Hinxton Hall, Cambridgeshire CB10 1RQ,
UK.
Tel: (+44) 1223 494520 Fax: (+44) 1223 494510
Contact : Rachael Selley, MRC Radiobiology Unit, Chilton, Didcot, Oxon OX11
ORD
Last_update : July 1995

Database : MPNADB (Medicinal Plants of Native America)
Species : Over 2,100 plant species
Curator : Daniel E. Moerman, dmoerman@umich.edu
Curator : Stephen M. Beckstrom-Sternberg, peosb@ars-grin.gov - ACEDB version

Comment : MPNADB is based on a two-volume book of the same name published in
1986 by the Museum of Anthropology of the University of Michigan. MPNADB was
first developed at the University of Michigan in DBase II.
ACEDB_vertion : 4.0
Last_update : June 1995
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/related/

Database : MsqDB
Species : Interspecies Mosquito database
Last_update : March 1996
ACEDB_version : 4.1
WWW : http://klab.agsci.colostate.edu/
Curator : Dennis Knudson, dknudson@lamar.colostate.edu
Curator : Martin Ferguson, martinf@lamar.colostate.edu
Contact : aaedbmgr@klab.agsci.colostate.edu

Database : MycDB
Species : Mycobacteria
Comment : MycDB is a collation of data on the mycobacteria, causative agents
of tuberculosis and leprosy. It is centered on the mapping and sequencing
projects under way in M.leprae and M.tuberculosis.
Curator : Staffan Bergh, staffan@biochem.kth.se
Curator : Stewart Cole, stcole@pasteur.fr
Last_update : November 1995
ACEDB_version : 4.1
Data_version : 4-9 (November 1995)
FTP : www.biochem.kth.se (130.237.52.64) in pub/MycDB
FTP : ftp.pasteur.fr (157.99.64.12) in pub/MycDB
FTP : bioinformatics.weizmann.ac.il (132.76.55.12) in
pub/databases/acedb/mycdb
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://www.biochem.kth.se/MycDB.html
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/other/

Database : OMIA (Online Mendelian Inheritance in Animals)
Species : wide range of animal species
Subject : gene and phene (familial trait or phenotype) information
Comment : MIA is modeled after Victor McKusick's Mendelian Inheritance in
Man (MIM) database and was developed at the University of Sydney, Australia,
in Advanced Revelation.
Curator : Frank Nicholas, frankn@doolittle.vetsci.su.oz.au
Curator : Gail Juvik, gjuvik@nalusda.gov - ACEDB version
ACEDB_vertion : 4.0
Last_update : September 1995
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/animal/
WWW : http://morgan.angis.su.oz.au/BIRX/phenes_form.html

Database : PhytochemDB (Plant Chemicals)
Species : wide range of plant species
Subject : Consists primarily of plant chemical data, including quantity,
taxonomic occurrence, and chemical activity.
Comment : Converted to ACEDB from the original SQL database.
ACEDB_version : 4.0
Last_update : June 1995
Data_version : July 1994
Curator : Stephen M. Beckstrom-Sternberg, peosb@ars-grin.gov
Curator : James A. Duke, ngrljd@ars-grin.gov
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/related/

Database : PomBase
Curator : Sean Walsh, svw@sanger.ac.uk
Curator : Marie-Adele Rajendream
PI : Bart Barrell, barrell@sanger.ac.uk
Species : Schizosaccharomyces pombe
ACEDB_version : 4.1
Last_update : September 1995
FTP : ftp.sanger.ac.uk in pub/PomBase

Database : PVP (Plant Variety Protection)
Species : Glycine max (soybeans)
Subject : Data about plant varieties that have been granted a Certificate of
Protection by the Plant Variety Protection Office.
Curator : Stephen M. Beckstrom-Sternberg, sbeckstr@nalusda.gov - ACEDB
version
ACEDB_version : 4.0
Last_update : June 1995
Contact: The Plant Variety Protection Office, Room. 500, National
Agriculture Library, 10301 Baltimore Blvd., Beltsville, Maryland 20705
Telephone : 301-504-5518
Fax : 301-504-5291
Email : Jeff Strachan, strachan@locus.nalusda.gov
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/related/

Database : RiceGenes
Species : Oryza sativa
Curator : Edie Paul, epaul@nightshade.cit.cornell.edu
PI : Susan McCouch
ACEDB_version : 4.1
Last_update : November 1995
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/ricegenes
Gopher : nightshade.cit.cornell.edu
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7007
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/

Database : SacchDB
Species : Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Subject : Budding (common baker's) Yeast Genome
ACEDB_version : UNIX 2.0, MacAce 2.0b4
Last_update : September 1995
Data_version : 2.4.12
Data : All Saccharomyces genes contained in the Registry of Gene Names.
Results of the completed chromosomal sequencing projects have been
integrated into the database. Physical Maps based on DNA sequencing
projects, hybridization to the Olson/Riles prime filter grids, and
restriction mapping. For the completely sequenced chromosomes the Olson
prime clones have been re-mapped (on the computer) to the DNA sequence.
Saccharomyces DNA sequences contained within GenBank are incorporated.
Literature references, most including abstracts, for the information
contained within the database. Gene protein product information obtained
from the YPD database (Garrels and Latter, CSHL) and the literature. Genetic
Maps including the underlying two point tetrad data. Including all tetrad
data reported in previous additions of the Mortimer Yeast Maps.
FTP : genome-ftp.stanford.edu in pub/yeast/SacchDB
FTP : genome-gopher.stanford.edu
WWW : http://genome-www.stanford.edu/
Funding : National Center for Human Genome Research, NIH
PI : David Botstein, botstein@genome.stanford.edu
Project Manager/Curator : Mike Cherry, cherry@genome.stanford.edu
Curator : Selena Dwight, dwight@genome.stanford.edu
Curator : Cathy Ball, ball@genome.stanford.edu
Curator : Rita Schmidt, bleb@genome.stanford.edu
Curator : Barbara Dunn, bdunn@genome.stanford.edu
Curator : Caroline Adler, adler@genome.stanford.edu
Programmer : Karen Davis, karen@genome.stanford.edu
Sys. Admin : Mark Schroeder, mark@genome.stanford.edu
Contact : yeast-curator@genome.stanford.edu
Data_Submission : yeast-curator@genome.stanford.edu

Database: SchistoDB
Species: Schistosoma mansoni (plus other schistosomes)
PI: David Johnston
Last_updated: In development
ACEDB_version: 4.3
Curator: Martin Aslett
Contact: Martin Aslett, aslett@ebi.ac.uk
FTP: (when available) ftp.ebi.ac.uk/pub/databases/parasites/Schisto/
WWW: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/parasites/parasite-genome.html

Database : SolGenes
Subject : Solanaceae - tomato, potato, pepper
Curator : Clare Nelson, cnelson@nightshade.cit.cornell.edu
PI : Steve Tanksley
Release : ACEDB 4.3
Last_update : April 1996
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/solgenes
Gopher : nightshade.cit.cornell.edu:71
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7006
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/

Database : SorghumDB
Species : Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench
PI : Keith F. Schertz, schertz@tamvm1.tamu.edu
USDA-ARS, Dept. of Soil & Crop Sciences, Texas A&M University, College
Station, TX 77843-2474
Phone : (409) 260-9252
FAX : (409) 845-0456
Curator : Najeeb U. Siddiqui, nus6389@tam2000.tamu.edu
Southern Crop Improvement Facility, Crop Biotechnology Center, Texas A&M
University, College Station, TX 77843-2123
Phone : (409) 862-1523
FAX : (409) 862-4790
Last_update : September 1995
ACEDB_version : 3.0
Data_version : 2.0
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/sorghumdb
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/

Database : SoyBase
Species : Glycine max (Soybeans) and related species
PI : Randy Shoemaker
Curator : David Grant, dgrant@iastate.edu
Assistant_curator : Marica Imsamde, mimsande@mendel.agron.iastate.edu
Contact : David Grant, dgrant@iastate.edu
ACEDB-Version : 3.7
Last_update : October 1995
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/soybase
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/
WWW : http://mendel.agron.iastate.edu:8000/main.html

Database : Syndb
Species : Homo sapiens, Mus musculus
Subject : STS content mapping & directed sequencing of Human Chromosomes
21,5 with Mouse for syntenic comparison
ACEDB_version : acedb v3.3 plus moulon server
Last_update : October 1994
FTP : genome.lbl.gov in pub/acedb/
WWW : http://genome.lbl.gov/Genome/acepage.html
Curator : Donn F. Davy, DFDavy@lbl.gov
Contact : Arun K. Aggarwal, aggarwal@genome.lbl.gov
PI : Michael Palazzolo
PI : Chris Martin
PI : Jan-Fang Cheng, jcheng@genome.lbl.gov

Database: ToxoDB
Species: Toxoplasma gondii
PI: David Sibley
PI: David Roos
PI: Jim Ajioka
Last_update: October 1996
ACEDB_version: 4.3
Curator: Martin Aslett
Contact: Martin Aslett, aslett@ebi.ac.uk
FTP: ftp.ebi.ac.uk/pub/databases/parasites/Toxo/
WWW: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/parasites/parasite-genome.html
WWW: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/parasites/toxo/toxpage.html

Database : TreeGenes
Species : Forest trees
ACEDB_version : 4.3
Last_update : May 1996
Curator : Bradley K. Sherman, bks@s27w007.pswfs.gov
PI : David B. Neale, dbn@s27w007.pswfs.gov
Contact : Dendrome@s27w007.pswfs.gov
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in /pub/treegenes
Gopher : s27w007.pswfs.gov/
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7508/
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/
WWW : http://s27w007.pswfs.gov/

Database: Trypbase
Species: Trypanosoma brucei
PI: Sara Melville
Last_updated: October 1996
ACEDB_version: 4.3
Curator: Howard Cobb
Curator: Martin Aslett
Contact: Sara Melville, sm160@mole.bio.cam.ac.uk
Contact: Martin Aslett, aslett@ebi.ac.uk
FTP: ftp.ebi.ac.uk/pub/databases/parasites/brucei
WWW: http://parsun1.path.cam.ac.uk/newtryp/toppage.htm
WWW: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/parasites/parasite-genome.html

Database : 21Bdb
Species : Homo sapiens
Subject : STS content mapping and sequencing of Human Chromosome 21
ACEDB_version : acedb.1-10 plus moulon server
Curator : Donn F. Davy, DFDavy@lbl.gov
Contact : Arun K. Aggarwal, aggarwal@genome.lbl.gov
PI : Michael Palazzolo
PI : Chris Martin
PI : Jan-Fang Cheng, jcheng@genome.lbl.gov
Last_update : April 1994
FTP : ftp://genome.lbl.gov in pub/acedb/
WWW : http://genome.lbl.gov/Genome/acepage.html

Database : 11Db
Species : Homo sapiens
Subject : Physical and Genetic mapping of Human Chromosome 11 Description :
11Db attempts to show as full a picture as possible of the genetic and
physical maps of Human Chromosome 11. It has two new displays, one which
attempts to integrate as much of the mapping data as possible using minimal
intervals, and one which displays YAC Contigs downloaded from SEGMAP
datafiles.
Contact : Benedict Arnold (b.arnold@bc.ic.ac.uk)
PI : Peter Little (p.little@bc.ic.ac.uk)
ACEDB_version : based on 4_1 with added map displays.
ACEDB_version : based on 3_6 with added map displays.
Data version : 1.0
Last Update : December 1995
WWW : http://chr11.bc.ic.ac.uk
FTP : ftp.cc.ic.ac.uk
Description : 11Db attempts to show as full a picture as possible of the
genetic and physical maps of Human Chromosome 11. It has two new displays,
one which attempts to integrate as much of the mapping data as possible
using minimal intervals, and one which displays YAC Contigs downloaded from
SEGMAP datafiles.

Database : 22ace
Species : Homo sapiens
Subject : Physical map of human chromosome 22, genomic sequencing and more
ACEDB_version : 4.1
Curator : Ian Dunham, id1@sanger.ac.uk
Curator : Gareth Maslen, glm@sanger.ac.uk
PI : Ian Dunham
Last_update : August 1995
FTP : ftp.sanger.ac.uk in pub/human/chr22/physical_map/
WWW : http://www.sanger.ac.uk/hum22/

Database : VoxPop
Species : Populus species
Curator : Carl G. Riches, cgr@poplar1.cfr.washington.edu
PI : Reinhard F. Stettler, STETTLER@coyote.cfr.washington.edu
Last_update : September 1993
ACEDB_version : 1.9
FTP : poplar1.cfr.washington.edu in /pub/
Gopher : poplar1.crf.washington.edu

Return to List of Questions
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Q5: What documentation exists for ACEDB?

A5:

>From Sam Cartinhour: The ACEDB Documentation Server is a repository for
documentation concerned with "A C. elegans Data Base", the generic genome
database software designed by Richard Durbin (MRC, UK) and Jean Thierry-Mieg
(CNRS, France). The server is intended as a resource for developers,
curators, and end-users of all (not just plant) databases derived from ace.
Eventually we hope to offer all kinds of documentation, from reprints to
(technical) gossip. The ACEDB documentation server is sponsored by the Plant
Genome Database Project at the National Agricultural Library (USDA). The
documentation server is listed on the home page for the Agricultural Genome
World Wide Web Server at http://probe.nalusda.gov:8000 .

Primary documents from the developers are:

   * acedb -- A C. elegans Database: I. Users' Guide.
   * acedb -- A C. elegans Database: II. Installation Guide.
   * acedb -- A C. elegans Database: III. Configuration Guide.
   * Syntactic Definitions for the ACEDB Data Base Manager --Jean
     Thierry-Mieg and Richard Durbin (1991-)

Get By anonymous ftp from ncbi.nlm.nih.gov in repository/acedb:
ftp://ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/respository/acedb/doc*tar.Z . The files are in TeX
(Jean Thierry-Mieg suggests latex xxx.tex; dvi2ps xxx.dvi > xxx.ps; lpr
xxx.ps) and PostScript.

ACEDB User's Guide in Japanese, from Hohru Sano, NEC, sano@exp.cl.nec.co.jp
http://www.cbi.or.jp/~sano/ .
(Postscript at http://www.labs.nec.co.jp/ .) [True? Someone please confirm,
I don't see it there. - Dave]

SampleDB, by Dave Matthews, is an ACEDB database constructed to demonstrate
features of ACEDB, especially map and sequence displays. Anonymous ftp to
probe.nalusda.gov:pub/acedocs/sampledb

You will find interesting documents in the wdoc subdirectory of the ACEDB
distribution.

The Australian National Genomic Information Service has prepared good
documentation of the C. elegans version as Angistute.ps and angistute.hqx
available by anonymous ftp at ncbi.nih.gov in repository/acedb/ace2.

Cherry, J.M., Cartinhour, S.W., and Goodman, H.M. (1992) AAtDB, An
Arabidopsis thaliana Database. Plant Molecular Biology Reporter 10 (4):
308-309,409-410

Tutorial manual for AAtDB: Cartinhour, S., Cherry, J.M., and Goodman, H.M.
(1992) An Introduction to ACeDB: For AAtDB, An Arabidopsis thaliana
Database. Massachusetts General Hospital. (Available on request in printed
form from the AAtDB curator). URL :
http://genome-www.stanford.edu/docs/aatdb_man.html .

A description of ACEDB: Cherry, J.M. and Cartinhour, S.W. (1994) ACEDB, A
tool for biological information. in Automated DNA Sequencing and Analysis,
edited by M. Adams, C. Fields, and C. Venter. Academic Press, pages 347-356.
URL : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8000/acedocs/overview.html .

Another description of ACEDB for physical mapping projects: Dunham, I.,
Durbin, R., Mieg, J-T & Bentley, D.R. (1994) Physical mapping projects and
ACEDB, in Guide to Human Genome Computing. Ed. Bishop, M.J. Academic Press,
pages 111-158.

Return to List of Questions
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Q6: What other resources are available for ACEDB?

A6:

Perl and WWW tools

The AGIS server at the National Agricultural Library provides tools for
integrating version ACEDB with perl and the World-Wide Web. A WWW interface
to 4.3 is available as ftp://probe.nal.usda.gov/pub/tools/webace.tar.gz.
Instructions for this interface can be found at
http://probe.nal.usda.gov:8000/acedocs/webace.html. (An earlier tool set is
available as ftp://probe.nalusda.gov/pub/tools/acelib.tar.gz).

For a general tool for converting data to ACEDB format input files, Joachim
Baumann (joachim.baumann@informatik.uni-stuttgart.de) has written the Perl
program TextConvert, available at ftp.informatic.uni.stuttgart.de/pub/DART/
.

Java Interface

A Java interface to acedb is under active development. Involved people are
Lincoln Stein, Jean Thierry-Mieg, Doug Bigwood, Jonh Barnett, Sam
Cartinhour. A test system can be seen at
gopher://genome-gopher.stanford.edu:70/11/ftp

If you have a contribution send a message to Mike
(cherry@genome.stanford.edu).

The Biosci conference bionet.software.acedb

There is a USENET/Biosci conference titled bionet.software.acedb created
expressly for discussion of ACEDB. The best way to interact with the Biosci
conferences is via a newsreader like rn, trn, tin or a WWW browser. Consult
your system administrator for more information.

If you do not have access to the Biosci conferences via a newsreader (e.g.
rn, trn, tin) you can participate in the conference by electronic mail. To
subscribe to the e-mail version of the conference send email to
biosci-server@net.bio.net (UK, European readers use biosci@uk.ac.daresbury
or biosci.daresbury.ac.uk) with no subject line and only the message
subscribe ACEDB-SOFT in the body. To unsubscribe send the message
unsubscribe ACEDB-SOFT to the same address. This is an automated service.
Your e-mail address will be taken from the header of the message that you
send. If you then send mail to acedb@net.bio.net the mail will be
distributed to all subscribers and to the electronic conference.

All of the articles in biosci.software.acedb are archived by Biosci at
http://www.bio.net:80/hypermail/ACEDB/ and by Mike Cherry at
http://genome-www.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/biosci_acedb. If your WWW browser is
configured properly you may be able to read the newsgroup at
news:biosci.software.acedb .

And more

The AAtDB, Soybase, GrainGenes, Mace, and TreeGenes [see Q4] databases
regularly submit data to the Plant Genome Database at the National
Agricultural Library (NAL). Nal makes this data available via the WWW using
an http server with URL: http://probe.nalusda.gov:8000/index.html You will
also find a selection of models.wrm files (schemata) for the various
databases here. You will want to get a "mosaic client" to examine this.

AboutDB is a stab at an integrated info and project tracking database for
the 'Greater ACEDB Community'. It was conceived and implemented by Staffan
Bergh (staffan@biochem.kth.se), the 'coordinator', during the ace94 workshop
in Montpellier, based on an earlier effort by John McCarthy. The aim is to
collect information on all aspects of ACEDB use as a database manager.
Currently it contains information on Databases implemented in ACEDB,
Colleagues in the community, some Tools for >curators of ACEDB databases and
some of the information on 'magic tags' collected during the ace94 workshop.
AboutDB can be reached at URL: http://kiev.physchem.kth.se/AboutDB.html

Other URL's that readers with mosaic clients might want to examine are:

   * http://moulon.inra.fr/acedb/acedb.html for C. elegans data
   * http://kiev.physchem.kth.se/MycDB.html for Mycobacterium data
   * http://moulon.inra.fr:8001/acedb/igd.html for an integrated genome
     database.

For information on how these were created see
http://moulon.inra.fr/acedb_conf_eng.html and en francais
http://moulon.inra.fr/acedb_conf.html A how-to manual on the Moulon server
is available at http://keck.tamu.edu/cgi/staff/ace-mosaic-howto.html

The Genome Computing Group, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, has an anonymous
ftp service at machine genome.lbl.gov which contains:

   * flydb - LBL's Drosophila Acedb-style database
   * 21bdb - LBL's Human Chromosome 21 Acedb-style database
   * querdb - LBL's query-language extensions to Acedb
   * metadata - LBL's compendium of Acedb database schema variants
   * macace-aatdb-demo.hqx - pre-release Acedb MacIntosh version
   * There is also a repository of contributed software for data conversions
     and the like.

[From Otto Ritter] IGD - the Integrated Genomic Database - is an
international project of DKFZ, Heidelberg (Germany), CNRS, Montpellier
(France), ICRF, London (UK), LBL, Berkeley (USA), and MRC, London/Cambridge,
(UK). IGD is an extensible object-oriented distributed information
management system with one global schema, physical data integration at the
back-end, and local data management at the front-end. It supports local
schema evolution and local data integration, and has a potential for truly
virtual "on-the-fly" integration (federation) of its resource databases.
Beside data integration, IGD provides graphical user interface,
client/server communication, and seamless interface to a growing number of
tools for structure, sequence, genetic, physical and comparative mapping
analysis. ACEDB is the IGD main software component for data management. As a
database, IGD integrates and references genome related data from public
sources. As an analysis tool, IGD provides uniform interface to existing
programs and program packages for tructure and sequence analysis, genetic
and physical map construction and analysis, etc. In addition to the major
human and mouse databases already planned SWISS-PROT/PIR, PDB, GDB, OMIM,
CitDB, CEPH, CHLC, CEPH-Genethon, Genbase, UK DNA ProbeBank, RLDB2, CAD,
MGD, MouseBackcross DB), crossreferences will be maintained to dataabases
established around specific model organisms (C.elegans, D. melanogaster, S.
cerevisiae, pombe etc.). Refs:

   * 1/ Ritter,O.: The Integrated Genomic Database. in Computational Methods
     in Genome Research, edited by S.Suhai, Plenum, 57-73 (1994).
   * 2/ Ritter,O., Kocab,P., Senger,M., Wolf,D., and Suhai,S.: Prototype
     Implementation of the Integrated Genomic Database, Computers and
     Biomedical Research, 27, 97-115 (1994)

Computer staff for the UC Berkeley Drosophila physical mapping project the
LBL Human Chromosome 21 project, and the LBL plant genome projects meet
regularly to coordinate their ACEDB extension and development efforts, along
with Frank Eeckman, who is working on the Macintosh version of ACEDB (for
further information, contact jlmccarthy@lbl.gov). They also keep in close
touch (via email, personal visits, etc.) with their counterparts in
Cambridge (Richard Durbin et al), Montpellier Jean Thierry-Mieg et al), and
the Interated Genome Database project in Heidelburg (Otto Ritter, Detlef
Wolf et al).

Return to List of Questions
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Q7: How should ACEDB be cited?

A7:

>From the distribution:
We realize that we have not yet published any "real" paper on ACEDB. We
consider however that anonymous ftp servers are a form of publication. We
would appreciate if users of ACEDB could quote:
Richard Durbin and Jean Thierry Mieg (1991-). A C. elegans Database.
Documentation, code and data available from anonymous FTP servers at
lirmm.lirmm.fr, cele.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk and ncbi.nlm.nih.gov.

Papers involved in database development could quote more precisely:
I. Users' Guide. Included as part of the ACEDB distribution kit,
II. Installation Guide. Included as part of the ACEDB distribution
III. Configuration Guide. Included as part of the ACEDB distribution
and the preprintkit available via anonymous ftp. Jean Thierry-Mieg and
Richard Durbin (1992). Syntactic Definitions for the ACEDB Data Base
Manager. Included as part of the ACEDB distribution.

--Jean and Richard.

Return to List of Questions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Q8: Is ACEDB object-oriented?

A8:

>From the ACEDB User's Guide:

A major current vogue in computer languages and database design is for
``object-oriented'' systems. It's also a source of lots of argument. We are
just trying to build a good system, and don't want to get caught in the
crossfire, but we do talk about organising our data into objects and
classes. We have undoubtedly been influenced by many of the ideas going
around, but it isn't likely our system would be regarded as kosher by the
object- oriented community. In particular there is no class hierarchy, nor
inheritance, and it is written in a modular but non-ideological way in
straight C. However display and disk storage methods are class dependent.

In some ways the class hierarchy is replaced by our system of models and
trees, which seems to be rather unusual. We think it is very natural for the
representation of biological information, where for some members of a class
a lot might be known about some aspect, but for most only a little is known.

The advantages of our sytem over a relational database, such as Oracle or
Sybase, is our ability to refine our descriptions without rebuilding the
database and the possibility of organising the storage of data on disk
according to their class, i.e. we store in a very different way the
tree-objects and the long stretches of DNA sequence.

Return to List of Questions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Q9: How can I get on/off the ACEDB announcements mailing list?

A9:

To get on or off the mailing list send mail to rd@sanger.ac.uk or
mieg@kaa.crbm.cnrs-mop.fr. New releases of the software are announced to
this list and very little else. The BIOSCI newsgroup bionet.software.acedb
[See Q6 for details] is on the mailing list.

Return to List of Questions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Q10: When and where is the Next ACEDB Workshop?

A10:

The 1996 Workshop scheduled in Heidelberg has been cancelled, a smaller
meeting may be organised in England at the end of 1996.

The Proceedings from the May 1995 ACEDB Conference are available at
http://probe.nalusda.gov:8000/acedocs/ace95/index.html. A final summary
report is available at
http://probe.nalusda.gov:8000/acedocs/ace95/ace95.final.html. Also available
online are collections of snapshots taken during the conference by Frank
Eeckman and by Dave Matthews.

For pictures of the ACEDB '94 Workshop in St. Matthieu de Treviers, see the
online collections:

   * by Mike Cherry at
     http://genome-www.stanford.edu/~cherry/pics/acedb-94.pics.html ;
   * by John Morris at http://weeds.mgh.harvard.edu/ace94/ace94.image.html ;
   * and by Brad Sherman at ftp://s27w007.pswfs.gov/ACEDB/ace94pix.html

Return to List of Questions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Q11:Who prepared this document & where is the current version?

A11:

This document will be posted monthly to the BIOSCI newsgroup
bionet.software.acedb and to USENET conference news.answers. It is intended
to be used as an index to ACEDB databases and to information about the
database software.

The WWW version of this document is at:
http://probe.nalusda.gov:8000/acedocs/acedbfaq.html

A text version is available via anonymous ftp at machine rtfm.mit.edu as
pub/usenet/news.answers/acedb-faq . If you only have electronic mail, the
FAQ can be retrieved from mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu.

Curators of ACEDB databases should take note of Question 4 and keep me
apprised of changes.

Errors of commission or omission are unintentional. If I have forgotten to
give you credit please let me know. Please send comments and corrections to:
acedbfaq@s27w007.pswfs.gov

This FAQ was created and maintained from 1993 - 1996 by Bradley K. Sherman .
Major contributions in getting it off the ground were made by Mike Cherry,
John McCarthy, and Doug Bigwood. Other contributors include:

   * Lisa Lorenzen
   * David Matthews
   * Edie Paul
   * Donn Davy
   * Eric De Mund
   * Sam Cartinhour

It is currently maintained by Dave Matthews.

Please cite as:
Matthews, D.E., and B.K. Sherman, ACEDB Genome Database Software FAQ,
ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/acedb-faq,
http://probe.nalusda.gov:8000/acedocs/acedbfaq.html, 1993-1996, approx. 50K
bytes.

To add or modify information in this document, please send mail to:
acedbfaq@s27w007.pswfs.gov

The GrainGenes Project is funded by the USDA ARS Plant Genome Research
Program.

Return to List of Questions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

From owner-acedb@net.bio.net Sat Nov 09 22:00:00 1996
Path: biosci!nntp.ucr.edu!info.ucla.edu!csulb.edu!news.sgi.com!news.mathworks.com!howland.erols.net!agate!overload.lbl.gov!acedbfaq
From: acedbfaq@s27w007.pswfs.gov (ACEDB FAQ Curator)
Newsgroups: bionet.software.acedb,news.answers
Subject: ACEDB Genome Database Software FAQ
Followup-To: bionet.software.acedb
Date: 10 Nov 1996 00:26:57 GMT
Organization: Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Berkeley CA
Lines: 1198
Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <5637gh$i58@overload.lbl.gov>
Reply-To: acedbfaq@s27w007.pswfs.gov
NNTP-Posting-Host: s27w007.psw.fs.fed.us
Summary: Frequently Asked Questions about finding and getting started with the genome database software ACEDB.
Xref: biosci bionet.software.acedb:1021 news.answers:79191

Archive-name: acedb-faq
Last-modified: 9 Nov 96
Version: 1.31

[A thousand apologies for having to repost.  Pnews truncated the previous
posting due to an error arguably mine.
- the neophyte curator]


----------------------------------------------------------------------------

ACEDB FAQ

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Curated by: Dave Matthews
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Frequently Asked Questions about ACEDB

   * Q0 : What is ACEDB?
   * Q1 : What is the current version of ACEDB?
   * Q2 : ! What hardware/software do I need to run ACEDB?
   * Q3 : ! Where can I get ACEDB?
   * Q4 : ! What ACEDB databases exist?
   * Q5 : What documentation exists for ACEDB?
   * Q6 : ! What other resources are available for ACEDB?
   * Q7 : How should ACEDB be cited?
   * Q8 : Is ACEDB object-oriented?
   * Q9 : How does one get on/off the ACEDB announcements mailing list?
   * Q10 : When and where is the next ACEDB Workshop?
   * Q11 : Who prepared this document & where is the current version?

Questions marked with '+' are new, those with '!' have substantially changed
answers.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Q0: What is ACEDB?

A0:

ACEDB is an acronym for A Caenorhabditis elegans Database. It can refer to a
database and data concerning the nematode C. elegans, or to the database
software alone. This document is concerned primarily with the latter
meaning. ACEDB is being adapted by many groups to organize molecular biology
data about the genomes of diverse species [Q4 gives contact information].

ACEDB allows for automatic cross-referencing of items during loading and
allows for hypertextual navigation of the links using a graphical user
interface and mouse. Certain special purpose graphical displays have been
integrated into the software. These reflect the needs of molecular
biologists in constructing genetic and physical maps of genomes.

ACEDB was written and developed by Richard Durbin (MRC LMB Cambridge,
England) and Jean Thierry-Mieg (CNRS, Montpellier, France), beginning circa
1990. It is written in the C programming language and uses the X11 windowing
system to provide a platform independent graphical user interface. The
source code is publicly available [See Q3]. Durbin & Thierry-Mieg continue
to develop the system, with contributions from other groups including
Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory and the Integrated Genomic Database (IGD)
project headed by Otto Ritter.

A description by Durbin & Thierry-Mieg: ACEDB does not use an underlying
relational database schema, but a system we wrote ourselves in which data
are stored in objects that belong in classes. This is nevertheless a general
database management system using caches, session control, and a powerful
query language. Typical objects are clones, genes, alleles, papers,
sequences, etc. Each object is stored as a tree, following a hierarchical
structure for the class (called the "model"). Maps are derived from data
stored in tree objects, but precomputed and stored as tables for efficiency.
The system of models allows flexibility and efficiency of storage --missing
data are not stored. A major advantage is that the models can be extended
and refined without invalidating an existing database. Comments can be added
to any node of an object.

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Q1: What is the current version of ACEDB?

A1:

(This answer refers to the software, not the C. elegans data.)

Current Unix version is 4_3 (as of May 1996) and is identical to the test
version test.4_3i.

A Macintosh version is available as version 4.1b1.

A Windows '95/NT version is available as version beta960927.

To retrieve the software see Q3.
To be kept informed of new releases see Q9.

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----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Q2: What hardware/software do I need to run ACEDB?

A2:

The software is available as source code, so you may be able to get it
working on any machine, with effort. It is also available in binary
(pre-compiled) format for a variety of machines. To retrieve the software
see Q3.

   * Unix:
        o Sun/SunOS 4.x
        o Sun/Solaris
        o DEC DECstation3100, 5100 etc.
        o DEC Alpha/OSF-1
        o Silicon Graphics Iris series 4, 5, 6
        o IBM RS-6000
        o PC 386/486/Pentium with Linux
        o NEC EWS4800
        o NeXT: contact Patrick Phillips at University of Texas, NeXTmail:
          patrick@wbar.uta.edu email: phil@decster.uta.edu
        o There exist, or have existed, ports onto Alliant, Hewlett-
          Packard, Convex. You may have to contact the developer responsible
          for the port to make these real.
   * New! Windows '95/NT
   * Macintosh:
     [Contributed by Frank Eeckman] Macace is distributed as a
     self-extracting archive that contains the application, the wspec files,
     and a fully up to date database. macace 3.0 is available with an
     updated 21bdb database. Please send all questions/bug reports to
     eeckman@llnl.gov A native powerPC version is available as well. Macace
     needs a macintosh with > 16 MBytes of RAM, and a 17" color monitor is
     preferred. System 7 or greater is required. For the multimedia
     extensions Quicktime 1.0 is required. Please add your name to our
     mailing list by sending email to eeckman@llnl.gov. It is our belief
     that for cost savings a powerPC mac will beat the advertised
     linux-intel combination. Macace is fully compatible with xace, but
     includes some multimedia extensions (picture and movie support) not
     found in the unix versions.

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----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Q3: Where can I get ACEDB?

A3:

Source code and Unix binaries are available in the following anonymous ftp
sites:

   * lirmm.lirmm.fr in pub/acedb
   * ftp.sanger.ac.uk in pub/acedb
   * ncbi.nlm.nih.gov in repository/acedb
   * bioinformatics.weizmann.ac.il in pub/databases/acedb

Linux binaries in ELF and a.out format, from Jeff Bryer:

   * ncbi.nlm.nih.gov in repository/acedb
   * bioinformatics.weizmann.ac.il in pub/databases/acedb

NEC EWS4800 binaries:

   * http://www.labs.nec.co.jp/freesoft/freesofte.html

New! Windows '95/NT 3.51, from Richard Bruskiewich:

   * ftp.sanger.ac.uk in pub/winace

MacAce, from Frank Eeckman, Cyrus Harmon and Richard Durbin:

   * genome.lbl.gov in pub/macace
   * ncbi.nlm.nih.gov in repository/acedb/macace

Return to List of Questions
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Q4: What ACEDB databases exist?

A4:

In alphabetic order by Database name

[Curators, please submit changes as new paragraphs]

Database : AaeDB
Species : Aedes aegypti (Mosquito)
Last_update : December 1994
ACEDB_version : 3.0
WWW : http://klab.agsci.colostate.edu/
Curator : Dennis Knudson, dknudson@lamar.colostate.edu
Curator : Martin Ferguson, martinf@lamar.colostate.edu
Co-Curator : Dave Severson, dave@aedes.vetsci.wisc.edu
Co-Curator : Leonard Munstermann, munst@biomed.med.yale.edu
Contact : aaedbmgr@klab.agsci.colostate.edu

Database : AAtDB
Species : Arabidopsis thaliana
Current version : 3-5
Last_update : August 1995
PI : J. Michael Cherry
Curator : David Flanders
Contact : arab-curator@genome.stanford.edu
Availability : UNIX and Macintosh versions via anonymous ftp
FTP : genome-ftp.stanford.edu in arabidopsis/aatdb
FTP : ncbi.nlm.nih.gov in repository/aatdb
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/aatdb
Gopher : genome-gopher.stanford.edu/11/Arabidopsis
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://genome-www.stanford.edu
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/

Database : AboutDB
Curator : Staffan Bergh, staffan@biochem.kth.se
Subject : ACEDB itself (meta-meta-metadata)
ACEDB_version: 3.0
Last_update : July 1995
WWW : http://www.biochem.kth.se/AboutDB.html

Database : ACeDB
Species : Caenorhabditis elegans
Current version: 4-8
Curator : Jean Thierry-Mieg, mieg@kaa.crbm.cnrs-mop.fr
Curator : Richard Durbin, rd@sanger.ac.uk
Curator : Sylvia Martinelli, sylvia@sanger.ac.uk
Last_update : August 1995
Availability: Unix and Macintosh versions via anonymous ftp
FTP: USA - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov in repository/acedb
FTP: England - ftp.sanger.ac.uk in pub/acedb
FTP: France - lirmm.lirmm.fr in genome/acedb
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/other/

Database : AGsDB (A Genus species Database)
Species : Aspergillus nidulans
Species : Neurospora crassa
Species : Bos taurus (cow)
Species : Homo sapiens anchor loci
Species : Gossypium hirsutum (cotton)
Species : Neurospora crassa
Species : Homologs of Aspergillus cell cycle loci for budding and fission
yeast
Curator : Leland Ellis, leland@straylight.tamu.edu
Last_update : March 1994
ACeDB_version : 3.0
Subject: Contains extensions to the Human C21 Models to provide for multiple
species, and queries between species via Homologs (e.g., cell cycle loci
with links via Homologs between Aspergillus and budding C. cerevisiae) and
fission (S. pombe yeast); interacting loci via defined Interactions for each
locus Revision : AAnDB for Aspergillus nidulans and ABtDB for Bos taurus
(cow) have been folded into AGsDB, and are not being developed futher as
individual species databases.
WWW : http://keck.tamu.edu/cgi/agsdb/agsdbserver.html FTP:
ftp://keck.tamu.edu/pub/agsdb/agsdb1_0_acedb3_0_solaris2.3.tar.Z

Database : Alfagenes
Species : Medicago sativa (alfalfa)
Curator : D. Z. Skinner, dzolek@ksu.ksu.edu
Telephone : (913) 532-7247
ACEDB_version : 3.0
Last_Update : July 1995
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/alfagenes
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/

Database : BeanGenes
Species : Phaseolus and Vigna
Curator : Phillip E. McClean, mcclean@beangenes.cws.ndsu.nodak.edu
ACEDB_version : 4.1
Last_updated : September 1995
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/

Database : BrassicaDB Species : Brassica napus (Canola/Oilseed Rape) and its
parental diploid species
ACEDB_version : 4.3
Description : Genetic maps of Brassica napus, QTL analyses for agronomic
traits, literature references and B. napus-specific DNA sequences will be
incorporated. We aim to integrate with B. napus genetic maps developed
elsewhere and to produce a Java interface that will link BrassicaDB with the
AAtDB (Arabidopsis thaliana) database through gene orthologies that are
becoming established between these closely related plant genomes.
PI : Martin Trick, Martin.Trick@bbsrc.ac.uk
Curator/Developer : Mazda Hewitt, Mazda.Hewitt@bbsrc.ac.uk
Last_update : Under development
WWW : http://nasc.nottm.ac.uk

Database : ChlamyDB
Species : Chlamydomonas
Curator : Elizabeth Harris
Contact : chlamy@acpub.duke.edu
ACEDB_version : 3.0
Data_version : 1.2
Last_update : August 1995
Availability : Macintosh and UNIX versions via anonymous ftp
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/chlamydb
Gopher : ftp.duke.edu/11/pub/chlamy
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/

Database : CIMMYT (Wheat International Nursery Data)
Species : Triticum spp.
ACEDB_version : 4.0
Last_update : September 1995
Curator : Hector Sanchez, hsanchez@cimmyt.mx
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/cimmyt
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/related/

Database : CoolGenes
Species : Cool Season Food Legumes; Pisum, Lens, Cicer, Lathyrus, Vicia faba
Curator : Fred Muehlbauer, muehlbau@wsu.edubr> ACEDB_version : 3.0
Last_update : January 1996
Gopher : gopher://probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/coolgenes/
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/

Database : CottonDB
Species : Gossypium hirsutum (cotton) and related species
PI : Russell J. Kohel (rjk0339@acs.tamu.edu), USDA-ARS, Southern Crops
Research Laboratory, 2765 F&B Road, College Station, Texas 77845
Curator : Gerard R. Lazo, lazo@tamu.edu
Curator : Sridhar Madhavan, msridhar@tamu.edu
Phone : 409-260-9311
Fax : 409-260-9333
Last_update : January 1995 (version 95.1)
ACEDB_version : 3.0
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/cottondb
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/
Data_submission_form : http://algodon.tamu.edu/

Database: Cruzdb
Species: Trypanosoma cruzi
PI: Wim Degrave
Last_updated: In development
ACEDB_version: 4.3
Curator: Martin Aslett
Contact: Martin Aslett, aslett@ebi.ac.uk
FTP: (when available) ftp.ebi.ac.uk/pub/databases/parasites/cruzi/
WWW: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/parasites/parasite-genome.html

Database : CSNDB
Focus : Cell Signaling Networks
Species : human
Curator : Takako Igarashi, taka@nihs.go.jp
Curator : Tsuguchika Kaminuma, kaminuma@nihs.go.jp
Assistant_Curator : Masumi Yukawa, yukawa@nihs.go.jp
Assistant_Curator : Shikiko Hasegawa, shasegaw@nihs.go.jp
Contact : Takako Igarashi, taka@nihs.go.jp
ACeDB_version : 4.1
Data : molecular data of signal molecules, molecular data of signal
transductions, signal transduction pathways, domain structure and function
of signal molecules, and three dimensional structures of signal molecules.
Availability : CSNDB is on WWW. WWW-browser is required to attach molecular
viewer RasMol ( ftp: colonsay.dcs.ed.ac.uk ) for displaying three
dimensional structure of protein. WWW : http://geo.nihs.go.jp/csndb.html

Database : Cyanobase
Species : Cyanobacterium synechocytstis sp. Strain PCC680
Last_update : September 1996
Developer : Nobuyuki Miyajima miyajima@kazusa.or.jp
FTP : ftp://ftp.kazusa.or.jp/pub/acedb/
WWW : http://www.kazusa.or.jp/cyanobase/
Remark : WWW interface Uses Java enhanced clickable maps.

Database : EthnobotDB (worldwide plant uses)
Species : wide range of plant species
ACEDB_version : 4.0
Last_update : June 1995
Comment : Converted to ACEDB from the original SQL database.
Curator : Stephen M. Beckstrom-Sternberg, peosb@ars-grin.gov
Curator : James A. Duke, ngrljd@ars-grin.gov
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/related/

Database: FilDB
Species: Filarial nematodes
PI: Mark Blaxter
Last_updated: In development
ACEDB_version: 4.3
Curator: Martin Aslett
Contact: Mark Blaxter, mark.blaxter@ed.ac.uk
Contact: Martin Aslett, aslett@ebi.ac.uk
FTP: (when available) ftp.ebi.ac.uk/pub/databases/parasites/Brugia
WWW: http://helios.bto.ed.ac.uk/mbx/fgn/filgen.html
WWW: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/parasites/parasite-genome.html

Database : FoodplantDB (Native American Food Plants)
Species : Over 1,100 plant species
ACEDB_version : 4.0
Last_update : May 1995
Curator : Stephen M. Beckstrom-Sternberg, peosb@ars-grin.gov
Curator : James A. Duke, ngrljd@ars-grin.gov
Comment : Converted to ACEDB from ORACLE.
Comment : Data originally from a publication by Yanovsky, Elias. 1936. Food
Plants of the North American Indians. USDA Miscellaneous Publication Number
237.
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/related/

Database : GrainGenes
Species : Wheat, barley, oats, sugarcane, relatives
Curator : David E. Matthews, matthews@greengenes.cit.cornell.edu
PI : Olin D. Anderson, oandersn@pw.usda.gov
ACEDB_version : 4_3
Data_version : 1.6
Last_update : April 1996
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/graingenes
Gopher : greengenes.cit.cornell.edu/
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7002
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/
WWW : http://wheat.pw.usda.gov/graingenes.html

Database : IGD (Integrated Genomic Database)
Species : Homo sapiens
Subject : Chromosome 21
Availability : September 1994 by ftp, on-line server October 1994
Contact : Otto Ritter, o.ritter@dkfz-heidelberg.de
Contact : Jean Thierry-Mieg, mieg@kaa.cnrs-mop.fr
Contact : Nicole Creau-Goldberg, creau@arthur.citi2.fr
Contact : Jean-Maurice Delabar, delabar@arthur.citi2.fr
WWW : http://moulon.inra.fr/acedb/igd.html
Description : IGD (Integrated Genomic Database) aims to integrate multiple
public general molecular biology and human genome specific databases into
single logical database with unified interface to existing analysis tools.
From data produced by the 4th International Workshop on Chromosome 21
(Genomics,1993,18,735-744) and from data provided by or taken from the
following databases and data repositories: GDB, OMIM, EMBL, CEPH, Genethon,
UKProbeBank, and RLDB.

Database : IXDB (Integrated X chromosome DataBase)
Species: Homo sapiens
Subject: Chromosome X
Acedb_version : 4.1
Data: The YAC map constructed by the Max-Planck-Institut fuer Molekulare
Genetik in Berlin, with all the attached experimental data necessary to
reconstruct the map. Information on each of 9000 YAC clones mapped to the X
chromosome, and constituting the YAC collection assembled with clone sets
from 14 different laboratories worldwide.
Latest_release:March 1996
Curator: Hugues Roest Crollius, roest@mpimg-berlin-dahlem.mpg.de
Contact: Ulf Leser, leser@mpimg-berlin-dahlem.mpg.de
PI: Hans Lehrach
FTP: ftp.mpimg-berlin-dahlem.mpg.de in directory pub/lehrach/x-map
WWW: http://www.mpimg-berlin-dahlem.mpg.de/~xteam

Database: Leishdb
Species: Leishmania major, L. infantum, L. peruviana, L. donovani and others
PI: Jennie Blackwell
PI: Al Ivens
Last_updated: October 1996
ACEDB_version: 4.3
Curator: Martin Aslett
Contact: Martin Aslett, aslett@ebi.ac.uk
FTP: ftp.ebi.ac.uk/pub/databases/parasites/Leish
WWW: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/parasites/parasite-genome.html
WWW: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/parasites/leish/leishpage.html (in development)

Database : LIGM-DB
Curator : Veronique Giudicelli
Focus : genetic and physical mapping of loci of Immunoglobulins and Tcell
receptors
PI : Marie-Paule Lefranc
Contact : Veronique Giudicelli LIGM IGMM UMR CNRS 9942 BP 5051 Rte de Mende
34000 Montpellier giudi@ligm.crbm.cnrs-mop.fr

Database : MaizeDB
Species : Zea mays L. ssp. mays and related species
Latest_release : April 1995
Acedb_version : 3.3
Comment : MaizeDB is a periodically extracted ACeDB front end for the Maize
Genome Database, MaizeDB, a SYBASE database, implemented using Genera
software, developed by Stan Letovsky.
Comment : Genera provides (1) up-to-the-minute form internet access to
SYBASE databases, both for query (WWW and APT) and data entry (APT only);
(2) database design alterations by systems administrators; (3) gopher file
extraction.
Comment: MaizeDB uses WWW record-to-record hard-links to 16 external
databases for (1) annotated sequences: GenBank, dbEST, GenoBase, PIR,
SwissProt, Prosite, ENZYME; (2) other species genome information:
AAtDB(Arabidopsis), RiceGenes, GrainGenes, SaachDB (yeast), CGSC(E. coli),
XLocus, RiceGenes, GrainGenes (3) germplasm: GRIN.
Data : Over 100,000 records include: 6513 mapped loci (located to chromosome
or better) including 1081 mapped genes and 1937 mapped probed sites (gene
candidates); 2448 probes; 2460 map scores; 1551 gel patterns
(Probe/Enzyme/Stock); 8777 stocks; 18,100 Variations (alleles, DNA
polymorphisms, rearrangements, etc); 596 phenotypes; 317 traits; 715 gene
products; 6158 bibliographic references; 2200 researchers with addresses.
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/maizedb
Gopher : gopher.agron.missouri.edu
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
Telnet : telnet teosinte.agron.missouri.edu login as guest, use password:
corncob
WWW : http://www.agron.missouri.edu/top.html
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/
WWW Genera information : http://gdbdoc.gdb.org/letovsky/genera/genera.html
Funding : MaizeDB USDA/ARS to E. Coe
Funding : Genera NSF BIR 92-01652 to S. Letovsky and M. Berlyn
Curator/PI : Ed Coe, ed@teosinte.agron.missouri.edu
Curator : Mary Polacco, maryp@teosinte.agron.missouri.edu
Assoc Curator : Pat Byrne, byrne@teosinte.agron.missouri.edu QTL data
Assoc Curator : Georgia Davis, gdavis@teosinte.agron.missouri.edu Map data
Assoc Curator : Marty Sachs, Maize Stock Center, msachs@uiuc.edu Genetic
Stock data
Assoc Curator : Christiane Fauron, FAURON@GENE1.med.utah.edu Mitochondrion
genome
Assoc Curator : Carolyn Wetzel, cmwetzel@iastate.edu Chloroplast genome
Assoc Curator : Steve Rodermel, S1SRR@ISUVAX.IASTATE.EDU Chloroplast genome
Design : Stan Letovsky, letovsky@gdb.org
Design : Mary Berlyn, mary@fetalpig.biology.yale.edu
Systems Manager : Denis Hancock, dhancock@teosinte.agron.missouri.edu
Contact : db_request@teosinte.agron.missouri.edu
Last_update : 11 April 1995

Database : Mendel (plant wide gene names)
Species : wide range of plant species
Subject : standardized designations for sequenced genes
Comment : The purpose is to provide a common system of nomenclature for
substantially similar genes across the plant kingdom. Mendel is maintained
by the Commission on Plant Gene Nomenclature.
ACEDB_version : 4.0
Last_update : July 1995
Curator : Carl Price, price@mbcl.rutgers.edu
Curator : Ellen Reardon, reardon@mbcl.rutgers.edu
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/related/

Database : Millet Genes
Species : Pennisetum Glaucum (Pearl Millet)
ACEDB_version : 4.1
Availablity : Local
Curator : Matt Couchman, couchman@bbsrc.ac.uk
Curator : Katrien Devos, devos@bbsrc.ac.uk

DataBase : Mousedb
Species : Mus Musculus
Species : Homo Sapiens
ACEDB_version : 3.0 with extensions to define and display cytogenetic data.
Description : Mouse genome data from the published literature, including
mouse genes with phenotypic effects, chromosome anomalies, imprinted regions
and man-mouse homologies with associated pathological disorders. The maps
are consensus ones. They use data, such as the HIS and anomaly data, to show
alignments between the genetic and cytogenetic maps.
Curator : Rachael Selley, rselley@har-rbu.mrc.ac.uk
PI : Mary Lyon
PI : Jo Peters
Availability : Mousedb is available publicly from the UK HGMP Resource
Centre's computing service via the INTERNET. For user id. please contact
Administration, HGMP Resource Centre, Hinxton Hall, Cambridgeshire CB10 1RQ,
UK.
Tel: (+44) 1223 494520 Fax: (+44) 1223 494510
Contact : Rachael Selley, MRC Radiobiology Unit, Chilton, Didcot, Oxon OX11
ORD
Last_update : July 1995

Database : MPNADB (Medicinal Plants of Native America)
Species : Over 2,100 plant species
Curator : Daniel E. Moerman, dmoerman@umich.edu
Curator : Stephen M. Beckstrom-Sternberg, peosb@ars-grin.gov - ACEDB version

Comment : MPNADB is based on a two-volume book of the same name published in
1986 by the Museum of Anthropology of the University of Michigan. MPNADB was
first developed at the University of Michigan in DBase II.
ACEDB_vertion : 4.0
Last_update : June 1995
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/related/

Database : MsqDB
Species : Interspecies Mosquito database
Last_update : March 1996
ACEDB_version : 4.1
WWW : http://klab.agsci.colostate.edu/
Curator : Dennis Knudson, dknudson@lamar.colostate.edu
Curator : Martin Ferguson, martinf@lamar.colostate.edu
Contact : aaedbmgr@klab.agsci.colostate.edu

Database : MycDB
Species : Mycobacteria
Comment : MycDB is a collation of data on the mycobacteria, causative agents
of tuberculosis and leprosy. It is centered on the mapping and sequencing
projects under way in M.leprae and M.tuberculosis.
Curator : Staffan Bergh, staffan@biochem.kth.se
Curator : Stewart Cole, stcole@pasteur.fr
Last_update : November 1995
ACEDB_version : 4.1
Data_version : 4-9 (November 1995)
FTP : www.biochem.kth.se (130.237.52.64) in pub/MycDB
FTP : ftp.pasteur.fr (157.99.64.12) in pub/MycDB
FTP : bioinformatics.weizmann.ac.il (132.76.55.12) in
pub/databases/acedb/mycdb
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://www.biochem.kth.se/MycDB.html
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/other/

Database : OMIA (Online Mendelian Inheritance in Animals)
Species : wide range of animal species
Subject : gene and phene (familial trait or phenotype) information
Comment : MIA is modeled after Victor McKusick's Mendelian Inheritance in
Man (MIM) database and was developed at the University of Sydney, Australia,
in Advanced Revelation.
Curator : Frank Nicholas, frankn@doolittle.vetsci.su.oz.au
Curator : Gail Juvik, gjuvik@nalusda.gov - ACEDB version
ACEDB_vertion : 4.0
Last_update : September 1995
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/animal/
WWW : http://morgan.angis.su.oz.au/BIRX/phenes_form.html

Database : PhytochemDB (Plant Chemicals)
Species : wide range of plant species
Subject : Consists primarily of plant chemical data, including quantity,
taxonomic occurrence, and chemical activity.
Comment : Converted to ACEDB from the original SQL database.
ACEDB_version : 4.0
Last_update : June 1995
Data_version : July 1994
Curator : Stephen M. Beckstrom-Sternberg, peosb@ars-grin.gov
Curator : James A. Duke, ngrljd@ars-grin.gov
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/related/

Database : PomBase
Curator : Sean Walsh, svw@sanger.ac.uk
Curator : Marie-Adele Rajendream
PI : Bart Barrell, barrell@sanger.ac.uk
Species : Schizosaccharomyces pombe
ACEDB_version : 4.1
Last_update : September 1995
FTP : ftp.sanger.ac.uk in pub/PomBase

Database : PVP (Plant Variety Protection)
Species : Glycine max (soybeans)
Subject : Data about plant varieties that have been granted a Certificate of
Protection by the Plant Variety Protection Office.
Curator : Stephen M. Beckstrom-Sternberg, sbeckstr@nalusda.gov - ACEDB
version
ACEDB_version : 4.0
Last_update : June 1995
Contact: The Plant Variety Protection Office, Room. 500, National
Agriculture Library, 10301 Baltimore Blvd., Beltsville, Maryland 20705
Telephone : 301-504-5518
Fax : 301-504-5291
Email : Jeff Strachan, strachan@locus.nalusda.gov
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/related/

Database : RiceGenes
Species : Oryza sativa
Curator : Edie Paul, epaul@nightshade.cit.cornell.edu
PI : Susan McCouch
ACEDB_version : 4.1
Last_update : November 1995
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/ricegenes
Gopher : nightshade.cit.cornell.edu
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7007
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/

Database : SacchDB
Species : Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Subject : Budding (common baker's) Yeast Genome
ACEDB_version : UNIX 2.0, MacAce 2.0b4
Last_update : September 1995
Data_version : 2.4.12
Data : All Saccharomyces genes contained in the Registry of Gene Names.
Results of the completed chromosomal sequencing projects have been
integrated into the database. Physical Maps based on DNA sequencing
projects, hybridization to the Olson/Riles prime filter grids, and
restriction mapping. For the completely sequenced chromosomes the Olson
prime clones have been re-mapped (on the computer) to the DNA sequence.
Saccharomyces DNA sequences contained within GenBank are incorporated.
Literature references, most including abstracts, for the information
contained within the database. Gene protein product information obtained
from the YPD database (Garrels and Latter, CSHL) and the literature. Genetic
Maps including the underlying two point tetrad data. Including all tetrad
data reported in previous additions of the Mortimer Yeast Maps.
FTP : genome-ftp.stanford.edu in pub/yeast/SacchDB
FTP : genome-gopher.stanford.edu
WWW : http://genome-www.stanford.edu/
Funding : National Center for Human Genome Research, NIH
PI : David Botstein, botstein@genome.stanford.edu
Project Manager/Curator : Mike Cherry, cherry@genome.stanford.edu
Curator : Selena Dwight, dwight@genome.stanford.edu
Curator : Cathy Ball, ball@genome.stanford.edu
Curator : Rita Schmidt, bleb@genome.stanford.edu
Curator : Barbara Dunn, bdunn@genome.stanford.edu
Curator : Caroline Adler, adler@genome.stanford.edu
Programmer : Karen Davis, karen@genome.stanford.edu
Sys. Admin : Mark Schroeder, mark@genome.stanford.edu
Contact : yeast-curator@genome.stanford.edu
Data_Submission : yeast-curator@genome.stanford.edu

Database: SchistoDB
Species: Schistosoma mansoni (plus other schistosomes)
PI: David Johnston
Last_updated: In development
ACEDB_version: 4.3
Curator: Martin Aslett
Contact: Martin Aslett, aslett@ebi.ac.uk
FTP: (when available) ftp.ebi.ac.uk/pub/databases/parasites/Schisto/
WWW: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/parasites/parasite-genome.html

Database : SolGenes
Subject : Solanaceae - tomato, potato, pepper
Curator : Clare Nelson, cnelson@nightshade.cit.cornell.edu
PI : Steve Tanksley
Release : ACEDB 4.3
Last_update : April 1996
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/solgenes
Gopher : nightshade.cit.cornell.edu:71
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7006
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/

Database : SorghumDB
Species : Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench
PI : Keith F. Schertz, schertz@tamvm1.tamu.edu
USDA-ARS, Dept. of Soil & Crop Sciences, Texas A&M University, College
Station, TX 77843-2474
Phone : (409) 260-9252
FAX : (409) 845-0456
Curator : Najeeb U. Siddiqui, nus6389@tam2000.tamu.edu
Southern Crop Improvement Facility, Crop Biotechnology Center, Texas A&M
University, College Station, TX 77843-2123
Phone : (409) 862-1523
FAX : (409) 862-4790
Last_update : September 1995
ACEDB_version : 3.0
Data_version : 2.0
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/sorghumdb
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/

Database : SoyBase
Species : Glycine max (Soybeans) and related species
PI : Randy Shoemaker
Curator : David Grant, dgrant@iastate.edu
Assistant_curator : Marica Imsamde, mimsande@mendel.agron.iastate.edu
Contact : David Grant, dgrant@iastate.edu
ACEDB-Version : 3.7
Last_update : October 1995
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in pub/soybase
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/
WWW : http://mendel.agron.iastate.edu:8000/main.html

Database : Syndb
Species : Homo sapiens, Mus musculus
Subject : STS content mapping & directed sequencing of Human Chromosomes
21,5 with Mouse for syntenic comparison
ACEDB_version : acedb v3.3 plus moulon server
Last_update : October 1994
FTP : genome.lbl.gov in pub/acedb/
WWW : http://genome.lbl.gov/Genome/acepage.html
Curator : Donn F. Davy, DFDavy@lbl.gov
Contact : Arun K. Aggarwal, aggarwal@genome.lbl.gov
PI : Michael Palazzolo
PI : Chris Martin
PI : Jan-Fang Cheng, jcheng@genome.lbl.gov

Database: ToxoDB
Species: Toxoplasma gondii
PI: David Sibley
PI: David Roos
PI: Jim Ajioka
Last_update: October 1996
ACEDB_version: 4.3
Curator: Martin Aslett
Contact: Martin Aslett, aslett@ebi.ac.uk
FTP: ftp.ebi.ac.uk/pub/databases/parasites/Toxo/
WWW: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/parasites/parasite-genome.html
WWW: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/parasites/toxo/toxpage.html

Database : TreeGenes
Species : Forest trees
ACEDB_version : 4.3
Last_update : May 1996
Curator : Bradley K. Sherman, bks@s27w007.pswfs.gov
PI : David B. Neale, dbn@s27w007.pswfs.gov
Contact : Dendrome@s27w007.pswfs.gov
FTP : probe.nalusda.gov in /pub/treegenes
Gopher : s27w007.pswfs.gov/
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7508/
Gopher : probe.nalusda.gov:7000/11/genome.databases/
WWW : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/plant/
WWW : http://s27w007.pswfs.gov/

Database: Trypbase
Species: Trypanosoma brucei
PI: Sara Melville
Last_updated: October 1996
ACEDB_version: 4.3
Curator: Howard Cobb
Curator: Martin Aslett
Contact: Sara Melville, sm160@mole.bio.cam.ac.uk
Contact: Martin Aslett, aslett@ebi.ac.uk
FTP: ftp.ebi.ac.uk/pub/databases/parasites/brucei
WWW: http://parsun1.path.cam.ac.uk/newtryp/toppage.htm
WWW: http://www.ebi.ac.uk/parasites/parasite-genome.html

Database : 21Bdb
Species : Homo sapiens
Subject : STS content mapping and sequencing of Human Chromosome 21
ACEDB_version : acedb.1-10 plus moulon server
Curator : Donn F. Davy, DFDavy@lbl.gov
Contact : Arun K. Aggarwal, aggarwal@genome.lbl.gov
PI : Michael Palazzolo
PI : Chris Martin
PI : Jan-Fang Cheng, jcheng@genome.lbl.gov
Last_update : April 1994
FTP : ftp://genome.lbl.gov in pub/acedb/
WWW : http://genome.lbl.gov/Genome/acepage.html

Database : 11Db
Species : Homo sapiens
Subject : Physical and Genetic mapping of Human Chromosome 11 Description :
11Db attempts to show as full a picture as possible of the genetic and
physical maps of Human Chromosome 11. It has two new displays, one which
attempts to integrate as much of the mapping data as possible using minimal
intervals, and one which displays YAC Contigs downloaded from SEGMAP
datafiles.
Contact : Benedict Arnold (b.arnold@bc.ic.ac.uk)
PI : Peter Little (p.little@bc.ic.ac.uk)
ACEDB_version : based on 4_1 with added map displays.
ACEDB_version : based on 3_6 with added map displays.
Data version : 1.0
Last Update : December 1995
WWW : http://chr11.bc.ic.ac.uk
FTP : ftp.cc.ic.ac.uk
Description : 11Db attempts to show as full a picture as possible of the
genetic and physical maps of Human Chromosome 11. It has two new displays,
one which attempts to integrate as much of the mapping data as possible
using minimal intervals, and one which displays YAC Contigs downloaded from
SEGMAP datafiles.

Database : 22ace
Species : Homo sapiens
Subject : Physical map of human chromosome 22, genomic sequencing and more
ACEDB_version : 4.1
Curator : Ian Dunham, id1@sanger.ac.uk
Curator : Gareth Maslen, glm@sanger.ac.uk
PI : Ian Dunham
Last_update : August 1995
FTP : ftp.sanger.ac.uk in pub/human/chr22/physical_map/
WWW : http://www.sanger.ac.uk/hum22/

Database : VoxPop
Species : Populus species
Curator : Carl G. Riches, cgr@poplar1.cfr.washington.edu
PI : Reinhard F. Stettler, STETTLER@coyote.cfr.washington.edu
Last_update : September 1993
ACEDB_version : 1.9
FTP : poplar1.cfr.washington.edu in /pub/
Gopher : poplar1.crf.washington.edu

Return to List of Questions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Q5: What documentation exists for ACEDB?

A5:

>From Sam Cartinhour: The ACEDB Documentation Server is a repository for
documentation concerned with "A C. elegans Data Base", the generic genome
database software designed by Richard Durbin (MRC, UK) and Jean Thierry-Mieg
(CNRS, France). The server is intended as a resource for developers,
curators, and end-users of all (not just plant) databases derived from ace.
Eventually we hope to offer all kinds of documentation, from reprints to
(technical) gossip. The ACEDB documentation server is sponsored by the Plant
Genome Database Project at the National Agricultural Library (USDA). The
documentation server is listed on the home page for the Agricultural Genome
World Wide Web Server at http://probe.nalusda.gov:8000 .

Primary documents from the developers are:

   * acedb -- A C. elegans Database: I. Users' Guide.
   * acedb -- A C. elegans Database: II. Installation Guide.
   * acedb -- A C. elegans Database: III. Configuration Guide.
   * Syntactic Definitions for the ACEDB Data Base Manager --Jean
     Thierry-Mieg and Richard Durbin (1991-)

Get By anonymous ftp from ncbi.nlm.nih.gov in repository/acedb:
ftp://ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/respository/acedb/doc*tar.Z . The files are in TeX
(Jean Thierry-Mieg suggests latex xxx.tex; dvi2ps xxx.dvi > xxx.ps; lpr
xxx.ps) and PostScript.

ACEDB User's Guide in Japanese, from Hohru Sano, NEC, sano@exp.cl.nec.co.jp
http://www.cbi.or.jp/~sano/ .
(Postscript at http://www.labs.nec.co.jp/ .) [True? Someone please confirm,
I don't see it there. - Dave]

SampleDB, by Dave Matthews, is an ACEDB database constructed to demonstrate
features of ACEDB, especially map and sequence displays. Anonymous ftp to
probe.nalusda.gov:pub/acedocs/sampledb

You will find interesting documents in the wdoc subdirectory of the ACEDB
distribution.

The Australian National Genomic Information Service has prepared good
documentation of the C. elegans version as Angistute.ps and angistute.hqx
available by anonymous ftp at ncbi.nih.gov in repository/acedb/ace2.

Cherry, J.M., Cartinhour, S.W., and Goodman, H.M. (1992) AAtDB, An
Arabidopsis thaliana Database. Plant Molecular Biology Reporter 10 (4):
308-309,409-410

Tutorial manual for AAtDB: Cartinhour, S., Cherry, J.M., and Goodman, H.M.
(1992) An Introduction to ACeDB: For AAtDB, An Arabidopsis thaliana
Database. Massachusetts General Hospital. (Available on request in printed
form from the AAtDB curator). URL :
http://genome-www.stanford.edu/docs/aatdb_man.html .

A description of ACEDB: Cherry, J.M. and Cartinhour, S.W. (1994) ACEDB, A
tool for biological information. in Automated DNA Sequencing and Analysis,
edited by M. Adams, C. Fields, and C. Venter. Academic Press, pages 347-356.
URL : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8000/acedocs/overview.html .

Another description of ACEDB for physical mapping projects: Dunham, I.,
Durbin, R., Mieg, J-T & Bentley, D.R. (1994) Physical mapping projects and
ACEDB, in Guide to Human Genome Computing. Ed. Bishop, M.J. Academic Press,
pages 111-158.

Return to List of Questions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Q6: What other resources are available for ACEDB?

A6:

Perl and WWW tools

The AGIS server at the National Agricultural Library provides tools for
integrating version ACEDB with perl and the World-Wide Web. A WWW interface
to 4.3 is available as ftp://probe.nal.usda.gov/pub/tools/webace.tar.gz.
Instructions for this interface can be found at
http://probe.nal.usda.gov:8000/acedocs/webace.html. (An earlier tool set is
available as ftp://probe.nalusda.gov/pub/tools/acelib.tar.gz).

For a general tool for converting data to ACEDB format input files, Joachim
Baumann (joachim.baumann@informatik.uni-stuttgart.de) has written the Perl
program TextConvert, available at ftp.informatic.uni.stuttgart.de/pub/DART/.

Java Interface

A Java interface to acedb is under active development. Involved people are
Lincoln Stein, Jean Thierry-Mieg, Doug Bigwood, Jonh Barnett, Sam
Cartinhour. A test system can be seen at
gopher://genome-gopher.stanford.edu:70/11/ftp

If you have a contribution send a message to Mike
(cherry@genome.stanford.edu).

The Biosci conference bionet.software.acedb

There is a USENET/Biosci conference titled bionet.software.acedb created
expressly for discussion of ACEDB. The best way to interact with the Biosci
conferences is via a newsreader like rn, trn, tin or a WWW browser. Consult
your system administrator for more information.

If you do not have access to the Biosci conferences via a newsreader (e.g.
rn, trn, tin) you can participate in the conference by electronic mail. To
subscribe to the e-mail version of the conference send email to
biosci-server@net.bio.net (UK, European readers use biosci@uk.ac.daresbury
or biosci.daresbury.ac.uk) with no subject line and only the message
subscribe ACEDB-SOFT in the body. To unsubscribe send the message
unsubscribe ACEDB-SOFT to the same address. This is an automated service.
Your e-mail address will be taken from the header of the message that you
send. If you then send mail to acedb@net.bio.net the mail will be
distributed to all subscribers and to the electronic conference.

All of the articles in biosci.software.acedb are archived by Biosci at
http://www.bio.net:80/hypermail/ACEDB/ and by Mike Cherry at
http://genome-www.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/biosci_acedb. If your WWW browser is
configured properly you may be able to read the newsgroup at
news:biosci.software.acedb .

And more

The AAtDB, Soybase, GrainGenes, Mace, and TreeGenes [see Q4] databases
regularly submit data to the Plant Genome Database at the National
Agricultural Library (NAL). Nal makes this data available via the WWW using
an http server with URL: http://probe.nalusda.gov:8000/index.html You will
also find a selection of models.wrm files (schemata) for the various
databases here. You will want to get a "mosaic client" to examine this.

AboutDB is a stab at an integrated info and project tracking database for
the 'Greater ACEDB Community'. It was conceived and implemented by Staffan
Bergh (staffan@biochem.kth.se), the 'coordinator', during the ace94 workshop
in Montpellier, based on an earlier effort by John McCarthy. The aim is to
collect information on all aspects of ACEDB use as a database manager.
Currently it contains information on Databases implemented in ACEDB,
Colleagues in the community, some Tools for >curators of ACEDB databases and
some of the information on 'magic tags' collected during the ace94 workshop.
AboutDB can be reached at URL: http://kiev.physchem.kth.se/AboutDB.html

Other URL's that readers with mosaic clients might want to examine are:

   * http://moulon.inra.fr/acedb/acedb.html for C. elegans data
   * http://kiev.physchem.kth.se/MycDB.html for Mycobacterium data
   * http://moulon.inra.fr:8001/acedb/igd.html for an integrated genome
     database.

For information on how these were created see
http://moulon.inra.fr/acedb_conf_eng.html and en francais
http://moulon.inra.fr/acedb_conf.html A how-to manual on the Moulon server
is available at http://keck.tamu.edu/cgi/staff/ace-mosaic-howto.html

The Genome Computing Group, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, has an anonymous
ftp service at machine genome.lbl.gov which contains:

   * flydb - LBL's Drosophila Acedb-style database
   * 21bdb - LBL's Human Chromosome 21 Acedb-style database
   * querdb - LBL's query-language extensions to Acedb
   * metadata - LBL's compendium of Acedb database schema variants
   * macace-aatdb-demo.hqx - pre-release Acedb MacIntosh version
   * There is also a repository of contributed software for data conversions
     and the like.

[From Otto Ritter] IGD - the Integrated Genomic Database - is an
international project of DKFZ, Heidelberg (Germany), CNRS, Montpellier
(France), ICRF, London (UK), LBL, Berkeley (USA), and MRC, London/Cambridge,
(UK). IGD is an extensible object-oriented distributed information
management system with one global schema, physical data integration at the
back-end, and local data management at the front-end. It supports local
schema evolution and local data integration, and has a potential for truly
virtual "on-the-fly" integration (federation) of its resource databases.
Beside data integration, IGD provides graphical user interface,
client/server communication, and seamless interface to a growing number of
tools for structure, sequence, genetic, physical and comparative mapping
analysis. ACEDB is the IGD main software component for data management. As a
database, IGD integrates and references genome related data from public
sources. As an analysis tool, IGD provides uniform interface to existing
programs and program packages for tructure and sequence analysis, genetic
and physical map construction and analysis, etc. In addition to the major
human and mouse databases already planned SWISS-PROT/PIR, PDB, GDB, OMIM,
CitDB, CEPH, CHLC, CEPH-Genethon, Genbase, UK DNA ProbeBank, RLDB2, CAD,
MGD, MouseBackcross DB), crossreferences will be maintained to dataabases
established around specific model organisms (C.elegans, D. melanogaster, S.
cerevisiae, pombe etc.). Refs:

   * 1/ Ritter,O.: The Integrated Genomic Database. in Computational Methods
     in Genome Research, edited by S.Suhai, Plenum, 57-73 (1994).
   * 2/ Ritter,O., Kocab,P., Senger,M., Wolf,D., and Suhai,S.: Prototype
     Implementation of the Integrated Genomic Database, Computers and
     Biomedical Research, 27, 97-115 (1994)

Computer staff for the UC Berkeley Drosophila physical mapping project the
LBL Human Chromosome 21 project, and the LBL plant genome projects meet
regularly to coordinate their ACEDB extension and development efforts, along
with Frank Eeckman, who is working on the Macintosh version of ACEDB (for
further information, contact jlmccarthy@lbl.gov). They also keep in close
touch (via email, personal visits, etc.) with their counterparts in
Cambridge (Richard Durbin et al), Montpellier Jean Thierry-Mieg et al), and
the Interated Genome Database project in Heidelburg (Otto Ritter, Detlef
Wolf et al).

Return to List of Questions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Q7: How should ACEDB be cited?

A7:

>From the distribution:
We realize that we have not yet published any "real" paper on ACEDB. We
consider however that anonymous ftp servers are a form of publication. We
would appreciate if users of ACEDB could quote:
Richard Durbin and Jean Thierry Mieg (1991-). A C. elegans Database.
Documentation, code and data available from anonymous FTP servers at
lirmm.lirmm.fr, cele.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk and ncbi.nlm.nih.gov.

Papers involved in database development could quote more precisely:
I. Users' Guide. Included as part of the ACEDB distribution kit,
II. Installation Guide. Included as part of the ACEDB distribution
III. Configuration Guide. Included as part of the ACEDB distribution
and the preprintkit available via anonymous ftp. Jean Thierry-Mieg and
Richard Durbin (1992). Syntactic Definitions for the ACEDB Data Base
Manager. Included as part of the ACEDB distribution.

--Jean and Richard.

Return to List of Questions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Q8: Is ACEDB object-oriented?

A8:

>From the ACEDB User's Guide:

A major current vogue in computer languages and database design is for
``object-oriented'' systems. It's also a source of lots of argument. We are
just trying to build a good system, and don't want to get caught in the
crossfire, but we do talk about organising our data into objects and
classes. We have undoubtedly been influenced by many of the ideas going
around, but it isn't likely our system would be regarded as kosher by the
object- oriented community. In particular there is no class hierarchy, nor
inheritance, and it is written in a modular but non-ideological way in
straight C. However display and disk storage methods are class dependent.

In some ways the class hierarchy is replaced by our system of models and
trees, which seems to be rather unusual. We think it is very natural for the
representation of biological information, where for some members of a class
a lot might be known about some aspect, but for most only a little is known.

The advantages of our sytem over a relational database, such as Oracle or
Sybase, is our ability to refine our descriptions without rebuilding the
database and the possibility of organising the storage of data on disk
according to their class, i.e. we store in a very different way the
tree-objects and the long stretches of DNA sequence.

Return to List of Questions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Q9: How can I get on/off the ACEDB announcements mailing list?

A9:

To get on or off the mailing list send mail to rd@sanger.ac.uk or
mieg@kaa.crbm.cnrs-mop.fr. New releases of the software are announced to
this list and very little else. The BIOSCI newsgroup bionet.software.acedb
[See Q6 for details] is on the mailing list.

Return to List of Questions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Q10: When and where is the Next ACEDB Workshop?

A10:

The 1996 Workshop scheduled in Heidelberg has been cancelled, a smaller
meeting may be organised in England at the end of 1996.

The Proceedings from the May 1995 ACEDB Conference are available at
http://probe.nalusda.gov:8000/acedocs/ace95/index.html. A final summary
report is available at
http://probe.nalusda.gov:8000/acedocs/ace95/ace95.final.html. Also available
online are collections of snapshots taken during the conference by Frank
Eeckman and by Dave Matthews.

For pictures of the ACEDB '94 Workshop in St. Matthieu de Treviers, see the
online collections:

   * by Mike Cherry at
     http://genome-www.stanford.edu/~cherry/pics/acedb-94.pics.html ;
   * by John Morris at http://weeds.mgh.harvard.edu/ace94/ace94.image.html ;
   * and by Brad Sherman at ftp://s27w007.pswfs.gov/ACEDB/ace94pix.html

Return to List of Questions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Q11:Who prepared this document & where is the current version?

A11:

This document will be posted monthly to the BIOSCI newsgroup
bionet.software.acedb and to USENET conference news.answers. It is intended
to be used as an index to ACEDB databases and to information about the
database software.

The WWW version of this document is at:
http://probe.nalusda.gov:8000/acedocs/acedbfaq.html

A text version is available via anonymous ftp at machine rtfm.mit.edu as
pub/usenet/news.answers/acedb-faq . If you only have electronic mail, the
FAQ can be retrieved from mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu.

Curators of ACEDB databases should take note of Question 4 and keep me
apprised of changes.

Errors of commission or omission are unintentional. If I have forgotten to
give you credit please let me know. Please send comments and corrections to:
acedbfaq@s27w007.pswfs.gov

This FAQ was created and maintained from 1993 - 1996 by Bradley K. Sherman .
Major contributions in getting it off the ground were made by Mike Cherry,
John McCarthy, and Doug Bigwood. Other contributors include:

   * Lisa Lorenzen
   * David Matthews
   * Edie Paul
   * Donn Davy
   * Eric De Mund
   * Sam Cartinhour

It is currently maintained by Dave Matthews.

Please cite as:
Matthews, D.E., and B.K. Sherman, ACEDB Genome Database Software FAQ,
ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/acedb-faq,
http://probe.nalusda.gov:8000/acedocs/acedbfaq.html, 1993-1996, approx. 50K
bytes.

To add or modify information in this document, please send mail to:
acedbfaq@s27w007.pswfs.gov

The GrainGenes Project is funded by the USDA ARS Plant Genome Research
Program.

Return to List of Questions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

From owner-acedb@net.bio.net Mon Nov 11 22:00:00 1996
Path: biosci!bcm.tmc.edu!cs.utexas.edu!howland.erols.net!newspump.sol.net!www.nntp.primenet.com!nntp.primenet.com!swrinde!news.uh.edu!usenet
From: tluong@bayou.uh.edu (Tim)
Newsgroups: bionet.software.acedb
Subject: Re: Corel Draw 6.0     I need it badly.  Please put it on.
Date: Tue, 12 Nov 1996 04:58:04 GMT
Organization: University of Houston
Lines: 1
Message-ID: <328803ab.12665647@news.uh.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: sip-16768.public-dialups.uh.edu
X-Newsreader: Forte Agent .99e/32.227



From owner-acedb@net.bio.net Mon Nov 11 22:00:00 1996
Path: biosci!SCOTTP.DEMON.CO.UK!peter
From: peter@SCOTTP.DEMON.CO.UK (Peter Scott)
Newsgroups: bionet.software.acedb
Subject: Biology and IT
Date: 12 Nov 1996 00:41:47 -0800
Organization: BIOSCI International Newsgroups for Molecular Biology
Lines: 71
Sender: daemon@net.bio.net
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <GCpEMfA5PDiyEwxF@scottp.demon.co.uk>
NNTP-Posting-Host: net.bio.net

Members of this Newsgroup may be interested in a novel Conference
organized by the British Society for Plant Pathology and the Systematics
Association. (Please excuse some limited cross-posting.)

In view of the expected appeal of this meeting to a wide range of
biologists and information technologists, the following advertisement
has been placed in Nature. It's not too late to register, even though
the deadline is around now. It's not expensive. The Open Forum is free
to all.

Check out the Web page, in which we are providing lots of links as an
experiment in the use of the Web to enhance the Conference.

-----
CONFERENCE
University of Kent, Canterbury, UK
16-19 December 1996

UNLOCKING THE FUTURE

For everyone interested in the interface of 
BIOLOGY and INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

Special subjects
- Information Technology in Plant Pathology
- Computer-Based Species Identification

Open Forum on
- BIOLOGY & IT: THE ROAD AHEAD
with
Professor Sir Robert May
Chief Scientific Advisor, UK Office of Science & Technology
Professor Peter Cochrane
Head of Advanced Applications & Technology, British Telecom Labs

Details and Registration http://www.bspp.org.uk/dec96con.htm
Dr Peter Jeffries, Research School of Biosciences, University of Kent,
Canterbury CT2 7NZ, UK
E-mail: p.jeffries@ukc.ac.uk.  Tel: +44 (0)1227 764000 ext. 3478,  Fax:
+44 (0)1227 787465
-----

The Open Forum will be of special interest. You may well know both of
the distinguished speakers from radio or television. To be sure of your
place at the Conference, Members of BSPP and the Systematics Association
are advised to book early.

For a programme and booking form, visit the Web site or contact Peter
Jeffries (see above). Please say whether you want to attend the
Practical and Tutorial Session on 16 December ("Everything you always
wanted to know about IT but were afraid to ask"), indicating your
preferred topics. Offers of contributions welcome - see above.

Peter
-- 
Peter Scott
Director, Information Institute, CAB INTERNATIONAL, Wallingford OX10 8DE, UK
Tel: +44 1491 832111.    Fax: +44 1491 833508

President, British Society for Plant Pathology

Work: p.scott@cabi.org     http://www.cabi.org
Home: peter@scottp.demon.co.uk
BSPP: http://www.bspp.org.uk

*********************************************************************
Information Technology in Plant Pathology and Systematics
BSPP/SA Meeting, University of Kent, 16-19 December 1996
SEE INTERACTIVE PROGRAMME AT
http://www.bspp.org.uk/dec96con.htm
*********************************************************************

From owner-acedb@net.bio.net Tue Nov 12 22:00:00 1996
Path: biosci!bcm.tmc.edu!news.msfc.nasa.gov!newsfeed.internetmci.com!malgudi.oar.net!corky.mco.edu!usenet
From: samir bhagwat <bhagwat@opus.mco.edu>
Newsgroups: bionet.software.acedb
Subject: (no subject)
Date: 12 Nov 1996 20:18:42 GMT
Organization: medical college of ohio
Lines: 10
Message-ID: <56am32$6dr@corky.mco.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: 136.247.240.142
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Mailer: Mozilla 1.1N (Macintosh; I; 68K)
X-URL: news:bionet.software.acedb

hi netters,
I am looking for a software program that would identify a consensus in a
set of sequences also that would identify a sequence that matches a
given consensus sequence. Is it anywhere on the web, I looked up the
Pedro's list and did not find any.
thanks in advance,
samir bhagwat




From owner-acedb@net.bio.net Wed Nov 13 22:00:00 1996
Newsgroups: bionet.software.acedb
Path: biosci!agate!howland.erols.net!surfnet.nl!swidir.switch.ch!swsbe6.switch.ch!news.belnet.be!news.vub.ac.be!hnets.uia.ac.be!news
From: Nerogenetics Laboratory <neurogen@uia.ua.ac.be>
Subject: Trouble with installing ACEDB on Linux
X-Nntp-Posting-Host: neurogen13.uia.ac.be
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Message-ID: <328B3BEC.37C7@uia.ua.ac.be>
Sender: news@uia.ua.ac.be (News database)
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Organization: Neurogenetics Laboratory
Mime-Version: 1.0
Date: Thu, 14 Nov 1996 15:34:04 GMT
X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.0 (Win95; I)
Lines: 28

Hi,


I am new to ACEDB and I tried to install the Linux-binaries on our 
Linux-box by untarring the binaries into a directory 
(/usr/local/acedb_43/). I also downloaded the IXDB to use with the 
software and puut the database in /usr/local/acedb_43/database or should 
it be /usr/local/acedb_43/rawdata. I copied the necessary files that 
came with the IXDB to the wspec directory.
I made symlinks to the data-directories (database, rawdata, PS) on 
another filesystem (/home/.../) , as the /usr system is not meant to be 
used by the users. i set the permissions, so other users could access 
the database.

So far everything went fine. 

I also downloaded an INSTALL-script, but his did not work, so I followed 
the instruction and tried to do everything by hand. but as I noticed 
there are some files missing in the Linux-distribution that are neede by 
the rpgram as described in the manula about how to install ACEDB. also 
as I use "bash" instaed of a C-sheel, i tried "export 
ACEDB="/usr/local/acedb_43" but the program still could not find the 
database ???

What went wrong ???


Peter Van Osta

From owner-acedb@net.bio.net Wed Nov 13 22:00:00 1996
Path: biosci!GREENGENES.CIT.CORNELL.EDU!matthews
From: matthews@GREENGENES.CIT.CORNELL.EDU ("Dave Matthews")
Newsgroups: bionet.software.acedb
Subject: Re:  Connection between Acedb4.3 and XV
Date: 14 Nov 1996 09:35:23 -0800
Organization: BIOSCI International Newsgroups for Molecular Biology
Lines: 33
Sender: daemon@net.bio.net
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <9611141733.AA21655@greengenes.cit.cornell.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: net.bio.net

Greetings, Louis-Marie et Pierre!

> I put XV in
> Acedb/bin so that it should be easy for Acedb pick_me_to_call procedure to
> find it. I put the image in the externalFiles directory. but all I get is a
> message in my terminal window saying: Acedb call ...but nothing happens.
> 
>         At this point, I badly need your help:
> Where should i put the binary xv?
> where should i put the pictures (a special directory)?
> What else ?

In ace4_3 there is no magic location for either xv or the image files.
Instead the magic location is the directory wscripts/.  

In your ace files, replace "Pick_me_to_call xv my.gif" with 
"Pick_me_to_call display my.gif".  Then create the following 
script named $ACEDB/wscripts/display:

#!/bin/csh
xv $ACEDB/externalFiles/$1 &


(assuming xv is on the users' PATH; if not you can replace "xv" with the
full pathname.)  Make the script executable, with "chmod a+x".

This script can be altered to specify a different location
for the image files, or to use a different viewer program instead of xv.
So this indirection via wscripts/ is very flexible and powerful.  It's just
too bad that it makes it so hard to guess where the magic is.

best regards,
- Dave

From owner-acedb@net.bio.net Fri Nov 22 22:00:00 1996
Path: biosci!agate!ihnp4.ucsd.edu!swrinde!newsfeed.internetmci.com!mel.hargray.com!news1.sunbelt.net!dial-12
From: Eli@infoave.net (Eli)
Newsgroups: bionet.software.acedb
Subject: "100 Shateware Links Page" (Free Shareware Links)
Date: Sat, 23 Nov 96 20:47:38 GMT
Organization: Info Avenue INTERNET Access
Lines: 3
Message-ID: <577rg0$1p4@news1.sunbelt.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: dial-12.r01.tnsmvl.infoave.net
X-Newsreader: News Xpress Version 1.0 Beta #4

"100 Shateware Links Page" (Free Shareware Links)
100 of the most current and active shareware links on the net!
Go to:  http://www.mamsofco.com/100sl

From owner-acedb@net.bio.net Tue Nov 26 22:00:00 1996
Path: biosci!bcm.tmc.edu!cs.utexas.edu!swrinde!howland.erols.net!feed1.news.erols.com!phase2.worldnet.att.net!uunet!in2.uu.net!oxy.rust.net!not-for-mail
From: "Mr. McGartland" <gartland@rust.net>
Newsgroups: bionet.software.acedb
Subject: biofeedback software
Date: 27 Nov 1996 18:27:40 GMT
Organization: Rust Net - High Speed Internet in Detroit  810-642-2276
Lines: 20
Message-ID: <01bbdc90$a97d8ec0$9c50c7cd@gartland.rust.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: mh-56.rust.net
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155

Hello,

	I have just purchased a biofeedback machine a few weeks ago and will have
a professional train me on it over a period of time. However, before any
of this is to become feasible, I need to get some software for it. (The one
that came with it is no good--this is to say that it is not working
properly; in addition, I do not like the software that came with it,
personally) I am wondering if anyone may send me some software (via E-mail)
that is compatible with my machine. I have a J&J DSP--two channels for EEG.
I would be much appreciative to anyone who may help me out with this.

It there are any FTP sites out there on the Internet, I would be grateful
for any reply.

Thanks.

Michael McGartland
gartland@rust.net



From owner-acedb@net.bio.net Sat Nov 30 22:00:00 1996
Path: biosci!internet!biosci!not-for-mail
From: biohelp (BIOSCI Administrator)
Newsgroups: bionet.software.acedb
Subject: BIOSCI/bionet miniFAQ & Fundraiser
Date: 1 Dec 1996 02:01:36 -0800
Organization: BIOSCI International Newsgroups for Molecular Biology
Lines: 239
Sender: daemon@net.bio.net
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <199612011000.CAA01226@net.bio.net>
NNTP-Posting-Host: net.bio.net

(LAST REVISION: 30-JUL-95)

This BIOSCI "miniFAQ" is designed to answer the questions that come up
the *most frequently*.  The main BIOSCI FAQ (Frequently Asked
Questions) is accessible on the World Wide Web at URL
http://www.bio.net/.

If you can not find an answer to your question in this or other
documentation, the BIOSCI technical support staff answers e-mail
queries sent to

		       biosci-help@net.bio.net

We can only answer questions about the use of the newsgroups and
mailing lists.  We unfortunately do not have the staff to do Internet
information searches or answer scientific questions.  Please post
those to the appropriate BIOSCI/bionet newsgroups.


	Contents:
	--------
	0) BIOSCI NEEDS YOUR SUPPORT!!

	1) Using the WWW to access the BIOSCI/bionet newsgroups.

	2) What to do about "spams," i.e., junk mail, ads, etc.

	3) Examples of subscribing and unsubscribing to the mailing lists.

	4) The BIOSCI user address and research interest directory.


0) BIOSCI NEEDS YOUR SUPPORT!!
------------------------------
BIOSCI's government funding has been expended, and we are now
operating solely from advertising revenue that we have raised from our
Web site at http://www.bio.net/.  We need just a few minutes of your
time to help us serve you.

You can do two important things which will take very little time for
you individually and will immensely help us continue to help you.

First, please use our WWW system at http://www.bio.net/ to access the
archives.  You can post or reply to messages via your Web browser as
described in item #1 below.  Your usage helps attract sponsors. If you
contact any of our sponsors, please be sure to thank them for
supporting BIOSCI. It is critical for them to get this feedback if
they are to continue their sponsorship for the long term.

Second, if you work for a company or organization that provides
products or services of interest to the biology community, please pass
this message on to your marketing or marketing communications
department or other appropriate group.  Please ask them to help
support BIOSCI by sponsoring our Web site and explain the uses and
benefits of the system to the biology community. If they are
interested, they can then contact us for further information at our
tech support address, biosci-help@net.bio.net.


1) Using the WWW to access the BIOSCI/bionet newsgroups.
--------------------------------------------------------
As of 10 December 1995, all BIOSCI/bionet full newsgroups are
accessible through the World Wide Web (WWW) at URL http://www.bio.net.
One can read and reply publicly or privately to both recent postings
and archived messages through one's Web browser if it is configured
properly to send e-mail.  Each newsgroup is equipped with its own WAIS
index.  The main BIOSCI home page also has access to the BIO-JOURNALS
Table of Contents database WAIS index and the BIOSCI user address
database described in another item further below.


2) What to do about "spams," i.e., junk mail, ads, etc.
-------------------------------------------------------
BIOSCI is a set of parallel USENET newsgroups (the "bionet" groups),
mailing lists, and a hypermail archive at URL http://www.bio.net/.
The same postings are distributed on all media (except for a small
number of mailing-list-only groups at net.bio.net).  Unfortunately it
is becoming a despicable practice on the Internet (by a few people out
to make a fast buck) to do automated mass postings to thousands of
newsgroups and mailing lists.  These attempts to grab free advertising
are refered to as "spams" in the usual, somewhat boneheaded, net
terminology.  USENET is more susceptible to this practice, and many
spams originate on the USENET groups and then are passed on to the
mailing lists.  However, spammers also get lists of mailing addresses
and hit these too, so neither medium is immune.

What should you do personally if you get junk mail?
---------------------------------------------------
Just delete it and move on without reading it further.  Filing a
protest is becoming increasingly useless because spammers are often
disguising the addresses where the messages are sent from.  Unless you
really understand Internet mail systems, your attempt at protest by
sending replies to the message will often end up being sent to the
address of an innocent person that the spammer is victimizing.

What can BIOSCI/bionet do to protect its newsgroups?
----------------------------------------------------
The only solution currently available is to moderate the newsgroup.
If this newsgroup is already moderated, then you are in good shape.
Moderation protects the USENET distribution from about 95% of the
spams that are being sent to date and protects the mailing lists
completely.  Moderation means, however, that someone has to take the
time to review each message before it goes out.  We have set up
software here that simply allows the moderator to forward to an
address at net.bio.net messages that (s)he wishes to have distributed.
This takes no more time than that needed to read the message and pass
it on, say about 1 min. per message.

Most newsgroups currently have a discussion leader who is responsible
for their newsgroup.  The discussions leaders and their e-mail
addresses are listed in the BIOSCI Information Sheet which is
available on the Web at http://www.bio.net/.  If a newsgroup is being
hit with too many junk postings, please contact the discussion leader
for that group and see if there is interest in moderating the group.
Please do not assume that by simply posting a complaint to the
newsgroup itself, anyone on the BIOSCI staff will act on your
complaint.  With close to 100 newsgroups to run, the BIOSCI staff has
to rely on the discussion leaders of each newsgroup to report problems
directly to us at biosci-help@net.bio.net.

We will moderate any of our newsgroups if the discussion leader tells
us that the readership of the group wishes to do so and if a moderator
is willing to do the work.  For most BIOSCI/bionet groups, this
entails only a few minutes of work each day.

Moderating a newsgroup will resolve probably 95% of the junk postings
on the USENET distribution.  Unfortunately there are easy ways for
determined spammers to override the moderation mechanism on USENET,
but we can protect our e-mail subscribers from unwanted postings if
the newsgroup is moderated.  You can also access our newsgroups over
the WWW at URL http://www.bio.net.  While this Web interface will not
stop spammers from trying to post to the groups, this will give you
yet another way, besides using USENET news, to keep the junk out of
your personal mail files.  For those of you with local USENET news
systems, the Web interface will also give you faster access to new
newsgroups and recent postings.


3) Examples of subscribing and unsubscribing to the mailing lists.
------------------------------------------------------------------
PLEASE NOTE: The BIOSCI management does NOT act on
subscription/unsubscription requests that are posted improperly to the
newsgroups and mailing lists.  People who do this only bother everyone
on the lists to no avail.  Please be sure to follow the proper
procedures below.

Gory details are in the BIOSCI Information sheets on the Web at
http://www.bio.net.  Below we give an example utilizing the
METHODS-AND-REAGENTS list at both of our two BIOSCI sites:

Users in the Americas and Pacific Rim countries who use the BIOSCI
------------------------------------------------------------------
node at computer net.bio.net:
----------------------------

A) Determine the "listname" which is the <=8 character mail address
                                         ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
   for the group.  These can be found in the BIOSCI Info. Sheet.  For
   the METHODS-AND-REAGENTS group the mailing address is
   methods@net.bio.net.  The listname is the portion of the address to
   the left of the @ sign, i.e., "methods".  The listname is used with
   the "subscribe" and "unsubscribe" commands illustrated below.

B) Mail all commands in the body of a mail message addressed to
   biosci-server@net.bio.net.  Do NOT send commands to the newsgroup
   posting addresses!  Leave the Subject: line blank, any text on it
   will be ignored.

C) In the body of your message put one or more of the following
   commands with an "end" command on the last line, e.g.,

   subscribe methods
   unsubscribe methods
   end

   Do NOT put your e-mail address or other text on these lines.  The
   server only allows you to cancel your subscription if the address
   on your mail header matches the address on our mailing list.
   Please ask for help at biosci-help@net.bio.net if your address has
   changed, e.g., if you know you are on the list but the server tells
   you that you are not a member.


Users in Europe, Africa, and Central Asia who use the BIOSCI node at
--------------------------------------------------------------------
computer daresbury.ac.uk (also known as dl.ac.uk):
-------------------------------------------------

To subscribe and unsubscribe to/from the BIOSCI lists, you need to
specify the full USENET newsgroup name with "bionet-news." prepended.
The USENET newsgroup names are listed in the BIOSCI Information sheet
on the Web at http://www.bio.net/.  For the METHODS-AND-REAGENTS list
the USENET newsgroup name is bionet.molbio.methds-reagnts, thus the
appropriate commands are

    sub bionet-news.bionet.molbio.methds-reagnts

    unsub bionet-news.bionet.molbio.methds-reagnts

These commands are included in a message addressed to mxt@dl.ac.uk,
NOT to the newsgroup mailing addresses.  As usual, include the text in
the body of the message as text on the Subject: line is ignored.

To unsubscribe from all the lists at the UK node, use

    unsub bionet-news

Please note that if the address in the list is different than the one
in your mail message header, you will not be able to unsubscribe by
this method. If you have problems, please mail biosci@daresbury.ac.uk.


4) The BIOSCI user address and research interest directory.
-----------------------------------------------------------
Please take this opportunity to add your name, address, and research
interest information to the BIOSCI User Address Database if you have
not already done so.

You can fill out the address form directly through our Web page at URL
http://www.bio.net/adrform.html.

The address database is reindexed nightly for WWW access (the URL is
http://www.bio.net/).  If you are not directly on the Internet but can
reach it by e-mail, please use our waismail server to access the user
directory.  waismail use is described above.  You can also request a
user address form by e-mail from biosci-help@net.bio.net.

Please check your database entry from time-to-time to see if your
address information is still up-to-date.  Because of our limited
personnel resources, we ask that you resubmit a *complete* form to
revise your entry; we only replace complete entries and do not have
resources to edit old forms.

				Sincerely,

				Dave Kristofferson
				BIOSCI/bionet Manager

				biosci-help@net.bio.net

