The Human Metabolome Database (HMDB) is currently the most complete and comprehensive curated collection of human metabolite and human metabolism data in the world. It contains records for more than 2180 endogenous metabolites with information gathered from thousands of books, journal articles and electronic databases. In addition to its comprehensive literature-derived data, the HMDB also contains an extensive collection of experimental metabolite concentration data compiled from hundreds of mass spectra (MS) and Nuclear Magnetic resonance (NMR) metabolomic analyses performed on urine, blood and cerebrospinal fluid samples. This is further supplemented with thousands of NMR and MS spectra collected on purified, reference metabolites. Each metabolite entry in the HMDB contains an average of 90 separate data fields including a comprehensive compound description, names and synonyms, structural information, physico-chemical data, reference NMR and MS spectra, biofluid concentrations, disease associations, pathway information, enzyme data, gene sequence data, SNP and mutation data as well as extensive links to images, references and other public databases. Extensive searching, relational querying and data browsing tools are also provided. The HMDB is designed to address the broad needs of biochemists, clinical chemists, physicians, medical geneticists, nutritionists and members of the metabolomics community. The HMDB is available at:
Biochemisches Nadelöhr: DNA‐Poly(ethylenglycol)(DNA‐PEG)‐Hybridstränge werden in einer gewünschten Orientierung in eine α‐Hämolysin‐Transmembranpore eingefädelt (siehe Schema). Die erhaltenen Einzelmolekül‐Rotaxane sind stabil und können – abhängig vom angelegten Potential, von der Orientierung, der Synthesemethode und der Stoppergruppe – zwischen zwei Zuständen reversibel geschaltet werden.
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