科技报告详细信息
GeneLab: A Systems Biology Platform for Omics Analysis
Costes, Sylvain V
关键词: ANIMAL MODELS;    CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM;    DEOXYRIBONUCLEIC ACID;    EXTRATERRESTRIAL RADIATION;    GENE EXPRESSION;    INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION;    MICROGRAVITY;    RADIATION DOSAGE;    SEQUENCING;    SPACEBORNE EXPERIMENTS;    SPACE FLIGHT;    TRANSCRIPTION (GENETICS);   
RP-ID  :  ARC-E-DAA-TN70456,ARC-E-DAA-TN70369
学科分类:心理学(综合)
美国|英语
来源: NASA Technical Reports Server
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【 摘 要 】

NASA GeneLab is an open-access repository for omics datasets generated by biological experiments conducted in space or experiments relevant to spaceflight (e.g. simulated cosmic radiation, simulated microgravity, bed rest studies). The GeneLab Data Systems (GLDS) version 4.0 will be available on October 1st 2019, and will provide the latest in terms of professional state-of-the-art bioinformatics platform for the space biology and radiation community to upload their data into an omics data commons, to process their data with vetted standard workflows and to compare to existing analyses. Started in 2015 as a repository designed to archive omics data from space experiments, GeneLab has expanded its scope to all ionizing radiation omics experiments conducted on the ground and has put considerable effort in providing carefully characterized radiation metadata on all dataset. GeneLab is also providing processed data derived from the raw data covering a large spectrum of omics (genome, epigenome, transcriptome, epitranscriptome, proteome, metabolome) to help users explore important questions: 1) Which genes or proteins are expressed differently in space for various living organisms? 2) What specific DNA mutations or epigenetic changes happen in space or after exposure to ionizing radiation? and 3) How does genetics affect these responses? Processed data available on GeneLab are derived by standard data analysis workflows vetted by hundreds of scientists who volunteered to join one of the four GeneLab Analysis Working Groups (Animal AWG, Plant AWG, Microbe AWG, Multi-Omics AWG). In this presentation, we will discuss how to bridge the gap between irradiation studies performed on earth and biological experiments conducted in space since the early 1990's. We will discuss how radiation dosimetry was estimated for datasets derived from samples collected during the Space Shuttle era or on the International Space Station. Finally, we will address future strategies regarding dose monitoring in future missions into space, inter-agency efforts to unify data under one umbrella, and knowledge dissemination across the radiation research community and the space biology community.

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