The STRENDA Guidelines aim to support authors to comprehensively report kinetic and equilibrium data from their investigations of enzyme activities. Both the STRENDA project and the STRENDA Guidelines are registered in biosharing.org, a web portal that collects inter-related data standards, databases, and policies in the life, environmental and biomedical sciences. Today more than 30 international biochemistry journals recommend their authors to consult the STRENDA Guidelines when publishing enzyme kinetics data.
VIMMP provides an easily accessible, user-friendly hub to access all tangible and intangible components, such as information, knowledge, services and tools to support the efficient decision making, uptake and effective use of materials. At the core of VIMMP will be a metadata enriched data environment that eases the tasks of all actors. In particular it will facilitate the translation of a scientific problem into modelling workflows, ready for simulation using a range of software tools integrated into an open simulation platform and deployed on cloud services. The VIMMP platform is open, so that any provider can easily integrate and deploy their software codes as well as services.
The I-ADOPT framework: The I-ADOPT framework is based on the I-ADOPT ontology designed to be used as a semantic broker between existing variable description models (including ontologies, taxonomies, and structured controlled vocabularies).