Most heartfelt welcome to everyone in the world of biology. I dreamt of creating a site for my Bioinformatics tool, but never knew I would have my own concept to decode DNA. I have been theorising about "How survival works" for years. Yes, there lot of chemistry and physics in it. However, a life system's ability to execute common survival traits regardless of the number of genes and cells is an amazing feature that needs to be studied. So, Life is more than that and don't limit yourself to physics and chemistry to solve cancer problems. I have a theory that I will post soon with an animation that would be able to relate all life systems. Therefore, I would be developing all my bioinformatics around the concept of survival. The origin of this concept is from a bigger picture of the entire Science studied most vividly and simplistically. However, I would reveal those ideas when the time is right.
I have collected 128 sequenced genomes with the nucleotide ratio of their genes. If you closely observe my data, you would find a pattern in the nucleotide ratio of the gene. If you do find it, I am happy to receive your interpretation towards it. Now they are lying on the shelf as it is difficult to map a protein ID to ncbi gene ID. I have tried to download to 21 GB database of idmap from uniprot. However, it takes too long to process a single query on such a gigantic database. So I need to get an alternate method to swiftly conduct my analysis.
Currently, I am working to unify all the databases in the world of bioinformatics so that the further development of any bioinformatics tool, including yours, is 1000 times easier. According to what I have experienced, three major organisations deal with the generation of ID for newly discovered genes and proteins: NCBI, Uniprot and Ensembl. Hence, my initial process is to combine their API to finally achieve a relation between 100 databases of protein IDs to a single NCBI gene ID.
Hope you like my stuff. If you hate my out-of-the-box theory, be brave enough to talk to me before criticising my theory behind my back.
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