The recent pandemics of viral diseases, COVID-19/mpox (humans) and lumpy skin disease (cattle), have kept us glued to viral research. These pandemics along with the recent human metapneumovirus outbreak have exposed the urgency for early diagnosis of viral infections, vaccine development, and discovery of novel antiviral drugs and therapeutics. To support this, there is an armamentarium of virus-specific computational tools that are currently available. VITALdb (VIroinformatics Tools and ALgorithms database) is a resource of ~360 viroinformatics tools encompassing all major viruses (SARS-CoV-2, influenza virus, human immunodeficiency virus, papillomavirus, herpes simplex virus, hepatitis virus, dengue virus, Ebola virus, Zika virus, etc.) and several diverse applications [structural and functional annotation, antiviral peptides development, subspecies characterization, recognition of viral recombination, inhibitors identification, phylogenetic analysis, virus-host prediction, viral metagenomics, detection of mutation(s), primer designing, etc.]. Resources, tools, and other utilities mentioned in this article will not only facilitate further developments in the realm of viroinformatics but also provide tremendous fillip to translate fundamental knowledge into applied research. Most importantly, VITALdb is an inevitable tool for selecting the best tool(s) to carry out a desired task and hence will prove to be a vital database (VITALdb) for the scientific community. Database URL: https://compbio.iitr.ac.in/vitaldb.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bib/bbaf084 | DOI Listing |
Brief Bioinform
March 2025
Computational Biology and Translational Bioinformatics (CBTB) Laboratory, Department of Biosciences and Bioengineering, Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee, Roorkee 247667, Uttarakhand, India.
The recent pandemics of viral diseases, COVID-19/mpox (humans) and lumpy skin disease (cattle), have kept us glued to viral research. These pandemics along with the recent human metapneumovirus outbreak have exposed the urgency for early diagnosis of viral infections, vaccine development, and discovery of novel antiviral drugs and therapeutics. To support this, there is an armamentarium of virus-specific computational tools that are currently available.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeliyon
June 2024
Georgetown-Innovation Center for Biomedical Informatics (Georgetown-ICBI), Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington DC, 20007, USA.
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus has affected over 700 million people, and caused over 7 million deaths throughout the world as of April 2024, and continues to affect people through seasonal waves. While over 675 million people have recovered from this disease globally, the lingering effects of the disease are still under study. Long term effects of SARS-CoV-2 infection, known as 'long COVID,' include a wide range of symptoms including fatigue, chest pain, cellular damage, along with a strong innate immune response characterized by inflammatory cytokine production.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComput Biol Med
October 2020
Ingine Inc., Cleveland, OH, USA; The Dirac Foundation, Oxfordshire, UK. Electronic address:
Knowledge management tools that assist in systematic review and exploration of scientific knowledge generally are of obvious potential importance in evidence based medicine in general, but also to the design of therapeutics based on the protein subsequences and fold motifs of virus proteins as considered here. Rapid access to bundles (clusters) of related elements of knowledge gathered from diverse sources on the Internet and from growing knowledge repositories seem particularly helpful when exploring less obvious therapeutic targets in viruses (for which knowledge new to the researcher is important), and when using the following concept. Subsequences of amino acid residue sequences of proteins that are conserved across strains and species are (a) more likely to be important targets and (b) less likely to exhibit escape mutations that would make them resistant to vaccines and therapeutic agents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Virol
February 2015
Vaccine and Infectious Disease Research Centre, Translational Health Science and Technology Institute, Gurgaon, India.
The beginning of the second century of research in the field of virology (the first virus was discovered in 1898) was marked by its amalgamation with bioinformatics, resulting in the birth of a new domain--viroinformatics. The availability of more than 100 Web servers and databases embracing all or specific viruses (for example, dengue virus, influenza virus, hepatitis virus, human immunodeficiency virus [HIV], hemorrhagic fever virus [HFV], human papillomavirus [HPV], West Nile virus, etc.) as well as distinct applications (comparative/diversity analysis, viral recombination, small interfering RNA [siRNA]/short hairpin RNA [shRNA]/microRNA [miRNA] studies, RNA folding, protein-protein interaction, structural analysis, and phylotyping and genotyping) will definitely aid the development of effective drugs and vaccines.
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