» Authors » Richard McVeigh

Richard McVeigh

Explore the profile of Richard McVeigh including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles. Areas
Snapshot
Articles 5
Citations 764
Followers 0
Related Specialties
Top 10 Co-Authors
Published In
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Recent Articles
1.
Goldfarb T, Kodali V, Pujar S, Brover V, Robbertse B, Farrell C, et al.
Nucleic Acids Res . 2024 Nov; 53(D1):D243-D257. PMID: 39526381
Reference sequences and annotations serve as the foundation for many lines of research today, from organism and sequence identification to providing a core description of the genes, transcripts and proteins...
2.
Schaffer A, McVeigh R, Robbertse B, Schoch C, Johnston A, Underwood B, et al.
BMC Bioinformatics . 2021 Aug; 22(1):400. PMID: 34384346
Background: The DNA sequences encoding ribosomal RNA genes (rRNAs) are commonly used as markers to identify species, including in metagenomics samples that may combine many organismal communities. The 16S small...
3.
Schoch C, Ciufo S, Domrachev M, Hotton C, Kannan S, Khovanskaya R, et al.
Database (Oxford) . 2020 Aug; 2020. PMID: 32761142
The National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) Taxonomy includes organism names and classifications for every sequence in the nucleotide and protein sequence databases of the International Nucleotide Sequence Database Collaboration....
4.
Schaffer A, Nawrocki E, Choi Y, Kitts P, Karsch-Mizrachi I, McVeigh R
Bioinformatics . 2017 Oct; 34(5):755-759. PMID: 29069347
Motivation: Nucleic acid sequences in public databases should not contain vector contamination, but many sequences in GenBank do (or did) contain vectors. The National Center for Biotechnology Information uses the...
5.
Tatusova T, Ciufo S, Federhen S, Fedorov B, McVeigh R, ONeill K, et al.
Nucleic Acids Res . 2014 Dec; 43(Database issue):D599-605. PMID: 25510495
NCBI RefSeq genome collection http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genome represents all three major domains of life: Eukarya, Bacteria and Archaea as well as Viruses. Prokaryotic genome sequences are the most rapidly growing part of...