INTRODUCTION
Presentation
Papers for discussion
A selection of Internet resources
Educational resources on Bioinformatics
-
2can. Educational
resource on Bioinformatics, sponsored by the European Bioinformatics Institute.
-
EMBER. Educational
resource on Bioinformatics, sponsored by EMBNet.
Bioinformatics portals and links collections
Genomics, Proteomics and Functional Genomics
-
Baylor HGSC.
Human
Genome Sequencing Center, Baylor College of Medicine, Texas, US
-
Celera. Rockville, Maryland,
US.
-
Center for Genome Research.
Whitehead
Institute / MIT, US.
-
CSH Laboratory - Genome
Resources. Cold Spring Harbor, NY, US.
-
E. coli Genome Project.
Frederick
Blattner Lab, at the University of Wisconsin.
-
Functional
Genomics. ESF programme on integrated approaches for Functional
Genomics
-
Functional Genomics.
Y.
F. Leung's Functional Genomics Web Site.
-
Functional
Genomics. Scientific Resources at Science magazine
-
Human Genome Project Information.
U.S.
Department of Energy.
-
HUGO. The Human Genome
Organisation.
-
HUPO. The Human Proteome Organisation.
-
Institut Pasteur. France.
-
Stanford Genomic Resources.
Stanford
University, US.
-
SWISS-2DPAGE. 2D-PAGE images
and reference maps
-
TIGR. The Institute for Genomic
Research, Rockville, Maryland, US.
-
Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute.
Hinxton,
UK.
-
Yeast Proteome Database
(YPD). Saccharomyces cerevisiae proteome
Additional information
Bibliographic references
Books
-
Introduction to Bioinformatics.Teresa K. Attwood, David J. Parry-Smith.
Longman Higher Education, 1999.
-
Bioinformatics. A practical guide to the analysis of genes and proteins.
Andreas D. Baxevanis and B.F. Francis Ouellete, Eds. Wiley InterScience,
2001.
-
Bioinformatics: Sequence and Genome Analysis. David W. Mount Cold
Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 2001.