AA Sequences are the working units of cells that make everything run (they help make structures, catalyze reactions and allow for signaling - a kind of internal cell communication). On Benchling, these are comprised of a string of amino acids and collections of other attributes, such as annotations.
View access policies.
Create and manage Benchling apps on your tenant
In Benchling, Assemblies are records of a process in which many fragment sequences are assembled in silico to create new construct sequences.
Collaborations represent which user or group has which access policies assigned to access an item.
Benchling supports custom entities for biological entities that are neither sequences or proteins. Custom entities must have an entity schema set and can have both schema fields and custom fields.
DNA Oligos are short linear DNA sequences that can be attached as primers to full DNA sequences. Just like other entities, they support schemas, tags, and aliases.
DNA sequences are the bread and butter of the Benchling Molecular Biology suite. On Benchling, these are comprised of a string of nucleotides and collections of other attributes, such as annotations and primers.
Entities include DNA and AA sequences, oligos, molecules, custom entities, and other biological objects in Benchling. Entities support schemas, tags, and aliases, and can be registered.
Entries are rich text documents that allow you to capture all of your experimental data in one place.
Manage folder objects.
Forms are custom interfaces for manual data entry
Lab Automation endpoints support integration with lab instruments, and liquid handlers to create samples or results, and capture transfers between containers at scale.
Legacy workflows allow orchestrating complex experiments.
Manage project objects.
Manage registry objects.
See our documentation on how to register entities.
Results API is an alpha API to create AssayResults in Benchling. This API is meant to replace the AssayResults API in the stable branch.
RNA Oligos are short linear RNA sequences that can be attached as primers to full DNA sequences. Just like other entities, they support schemas, tags, and aliases.
Schemas define properties on benchling objects
A study is a set of experiments conducted to answer a specific question in a structured way. In Benchling, a study is an object that can be tied to any set of entries, entities, containers, and tasks, and a place to write down the purpose of the work and track its progress.
View the Unit Dictionary
Worklists are a convenient way to organize items for bulk actions, and are complementary to folders and projects