RIDOM: Ribosomal Differentiation of Medical Micro-organisms Database.

Dag Harmsen, Jörg Rothgänger, Matthias Frosch, Jürgen Albert

Institut für Hygiene und Mikrobiologie, Universität Würzburg, D-97080 Würzburg, Germany.

Journal Article: Nucleic Acids Research (impact factor: 7.48). 02/2002; 30(1):416-7.

Abstract

The ribosomal differentiation of medical micro-organisms (RIDOM) web server, first described by Harmsen et al. [Harmsden,D., Rothganger,J., Singer,C., Albert,J. and Frosch,M. (1999) Lancet, 353, 291], is an evolving electronic resource designed to provide micro-organism differentiation services for medical identification needs. The diagnostic procedure begins with a specimen partial small subunit ribosomal DNA (16S rDNA) sequence. Resulting from a similarity search, a species or genus name for the specimen in question will be returned. Where the first results are ambiguous or do not define to species level, hints for further molecular, i.e. internal transcribed spacer, and conventional phenotypic differentiation will be offered ('sequential and polyphasic approach'). Additionally, each entry in RIDOM contains detailed medical and taxonomic information linked, context-sensitive, to external World Wide Web services. Nearly all sequences are newly determined and the sequence chromatograms are available for intersubjective quality control. Similarity searches are now also possible by direct submission of trace files (ABI or SCF format). Based on the PHRED/PHRAP software, error probability measures are attached to each predicted nucleotide base and visualised with a new 'Trace Editor'. The RIDOM web site is directly accessible on the World Wide Web at http://www.ridom.de/. The email address for questions and comments is webmaster@ridom.de.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

'sequential
 
conventional phenotypic differentiation
 
direct submission
 
error probability measures
 
evolving electronic resource
 
external World Wide Web services
 
first results
 
internal transcribed spacer
 
intersubjective quality control
 
medical
 
medical identification
 
medical micro-organisms
 
new 'Trace Editor'
 
polyphasic approach'
 
predicted nucleotide base
 
similarity search
 
Similarity searches
 
species level
 
specimen partial small subunit ribosomal DNA
 
World Wide Web