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SciCrunch Registry is a curated repository of scientific resources, with a focus on biomedical resources, including tools, databases, and core facilities - visit SciCrunch to register your resource.
A tool for performing multi-cluster gene functional enrichment analyses on large scale data (microarray experiments with many time-points, cell-types, tissue-types, etc.). It facilitates co-analysis of multiple gene lists and yields as output a rich functional map showing the shared and list-specific functional features. The output can be visualized in tabular, heatmap or network formats using built-in options as well as third-party software. It uses the hypergeometric test to obtain functional enrichment achieved via the gene list enrichment analysis option available in ToppGene.
Proper citation: ToppCluster (RRID:SCR_001503) Copy
http://www.digestive.niddk.nih.gov
Information dissemination service of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) established to increase knowledge and understanding about digestive diseases among people with these conditions and their families, health care professionals, and the general public: online, in booklets and fact sheets, by email, and over the phone. To carry out this mission, NDDIC works closely with a coordinating panel of representatives from Federal agencies, voluntary organizations on the national level, and professional groups to identify and respond to informational needs about digestive diseases. NDDIC provides the following informational products and services: * Response to inquiries about digestive diseases - ranging from information about available patient and professional education materials to statistical data. By phone (8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. eastern time, M-F), fax, mail, and email. * Publications about specific digestive diseases, provided free of copyright, in varying reading levels. Available online or as booklets and brochures. NDDIC also sends publications to health fairs and community events. * Referrals to health professionals through the National Library of Medicine''''s MEDLINEplus includes a consumer-friendly listing of organizations that will assist you in your search for physicians and other health professionals. * Exhibits at professional meetings specific to digestive diseases, as well as cross-cutting professional meetings. NDDIC exhibits at nine professional meetings each year, including Digestive Diseases Week, American College of Gastroenterology, Society of Gastroenterology Nurses and Associates, American Academy of Family Physicians, American Academy of Physician Assistants, American Nurses Association, and the National Conference for Nurse Practitioners.
Proper citation: National Digestive Diseases Information Clearinghouse (RRID:SCR_006771) Copy
Repository of biospecimen and phenotype data collected from Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis cases and controls recruited at six sites throughout North America that are available to the scientific community. Phenotyping is performed using a standardized protocol, and lymphoblastoid cell lines are established for each subject. Phenotype data for each subject are collected by the Consortium's Data Coordinating Center (DCC), and phenotype data for all subjects with DNA samples are available. The resulting DNA samples have already been utilized by the Consortium to complete various association studies, including genome-wide association studies using dense genotyping arrays. Researchers can obtain DNA samples and phenotype, genotype, and pedigree data through the Data Repository. GWAS data must be requested through dbGAP. The IBDGC is involved with independent genetic research studies and actively works with members of the IBD and genetic communities on collaborative projects. They are also members of the International IBD Genetics Consortium. Phenotype Tools: The Consortium Phenotype Committee, led by Dr. Hillary Steinhart designed and validated paper forms to collect extensive phenotype data on Crohn's Disease and ulcerative colitis. Consortium phenotype tools are available for use by non-Consortium members.
Proper citation: NIDDK Inflammatory Bowel Disease Genetics Consortium (RRID:SCR_001461) Copy
Group of 10 academic laboratories provide pancreatic islets of cGMP-quality to eligible investigators for use in FDA approved, IRB-approved transplantation protocols in which isolated human islets are transplanted into qualified patients afflicted with type 1 diabetes mellitus; optimize the harvest, purification, function, storage, and shipment of islets while developing tests that characterize the quality and predict the effectiveness of islets transplanted into patients with diabetes mellitus; and provide pancreatic islets for basic science studies. The centers are electronically linked through an Administrative and Bioinformatics Coordinating Center (ABCC). The ABCC manages a system with objectively defined criteria that establishes the order of priority for islet distribution. It also provides database and other informatics to track the utilization of pancreata and all distributed clinical grade islets for transplant and basic research, and supports the Islet Cell Resource Centers Consortium so that the research community has a single entry point to the program. Qualified researchers from domestic institutions may request islets by submitting a written application to the director of the ABCC. The ICRs will distribute Islets as appropriate for either clinical or basic science protocol use to eligible investigators who have received a favorable review and subsequent approval by the ICR Steering Committee (SC). The Administrative and Bioinformatics Coordinating Center (ABCC) manages the distribution according to a priority list. The ABCC will give preference to investigators who have peer-reviewed, NIH-funded research support.
Proper citation: Islet Cell Resource Centers (RRID:SCR_002806) Copy
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE, documented May 10, 2017. A pilot effort that has developed a centralized, web-based biospecimen locator that presents biospecimens collected and stored at participating Arizona hospitals and biospecimen banks, which are available for acquisition and use by researchers. Researchers may use this site to browse, search and request biospecimens to use in qualified studies. The development of the ABL was guided by the Arizona Biospecimen Consortium (ABC), a consortium of hospitals and medical centers in the Phoenix area, and is now being piloted by this Consortium under the direction of ABRC. You may browse by type (cells, fluid, molecular, tissue) or disease. Common data elements decided by the ABC Standards Committee, based on data elements on the National Cancer Institute''s (NCI''s) Common Biorepository Model (CBM), are displayed. These describe the minimum set of data elements that the NCI determined were most important for a researcher to see about a biospecimen. The ABL currently does not display information on whether or not clinical data is available to accompany the biospecimens. However, a requester has the ability to solicit clinical data in the request. Once a request is approved, the biospecimen provider will contact the requester to discuss the request (and the requester''s questions) before finalizing the invoice and shipment. The ABL is available to the public to browse. In order to request biospecimens from the ABL, the researcher will be required to submit the requested required information. Upon submission of the information, shipment of the requested biospecimen(s) will be dependent on the scientific and institutional review approval. Account required. Registration is open to everyone., documented on August 1, 2015. Consortium that aims to facilitate interdisciplinary collaborations to advance the understanding of pancreatic islet development and function, with the goal of developing innovative therapies to correct the loss of beta cell mass in diabetes, including cell reprogramming, regeneration and replacement. They are responsible for collaboratively generating the necessary reagents, mouse strains, antibodies, assays, protocols, technologies and validation assays that are beyond the scope of any single research effort. The scientific goals for the BCBC are to: * Use cues from pancreatic development to directly differentiate pancreatic beta cells and islets from stem / progenitor cells for use in cell-replacement therapies for diabetes, * Determine how to stimulate beta cell regeneration in the adult pancreas as a basis for improving beta cell mass in diabetic patients, * Determine how to reprogram progenitor / adult cells into pancreatic beta-cells both in-vitro and in-vivo as a mean for developing cell-replacement therapies for diabetes, and * Investigate the progression of human type-1 diabetes using patient-derived cells and tissues transplanted in humanized mouse models. Many of the BCBC investigator-initiated projects involve reagent-generating activities that will benefit the larger scientific community. The combination of programs and activities should accelerate the pace of major new discoveries and progress within the field of beta cell biology.
Proper citation: Beta Cell Biology Consortium (RRID:SCR_005136) Copy
https://grade.bsc.gwu.edu/web/grade/home
A comparative study that aims to determine which combination of two medications is best for glycemic control in Type 2 Diabetes, has the fewest side effects, and is the most beneficial for overall health. GRADE is a randomized clinical trial of participants diagnosed with type 2 diabetes within the past 10 years who are already on metformin. Participants will be randomly assigned to 1 of 4 commonly-used glucose-lowering drugs (glimepiride, sitagliptin, liraglutide, and basal insulin glargine), plus metformin, and will be followed for up to 7 years.
Proper citation: Glycemic Reduction Approaches in Diabetes: A Comparative Effectiveness Study (GRADE) (RRID:SCR_014384) Copy
http://sharedresources.fredhutch.org/core-facilities/cceh-administration
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on July,27,2022. Core facility that provides scientific and budgetary oversight for all CCEH activities. This includes training programs, high school summer internships, and and pilot and feasibility program for new projects.
Proper citation: Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center Co-operative Center for Excellence in Hematology (RRID:SCR_015320) Copy
http://www.med.umich.edu/mgpc/
Center whose goal is to investigate signal transduction mechanisms regulating homeostasis and GI disorders. Their approach includes studies on genetics and gene regulation, cellular signaling pathways, receptors and ion channels.
Proper citation: University of Michigan Center for Gastrointestinal Research (RRID:SCR_015605) Copy
http://rc2resource.scripps.edu
Database portal for a project that aims to discover and characterize new molecular pathways that can be targeted pharmacologically to revert obesity-linked adipocyte defects that drive systemic insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes. It works to identify in tandem physiologically-relevant proteins and chemical tools in order to expedite their functional annotation and therapeutic validation.
Proper citation: Chemoproteomic identification and therapeutic validation of proteins of metabolic significance (RRID:SCR_015847) Copy
http://monogenicdiabetes.uchicago.edu/mody-registry-2/
Research project that aims to learn more about the number of people who have monogenic diabetes, why and how it happens, and how best to treat it. Any adult or child with a known genetic cause of diabetes may join the MODY Registry.
Proper citation: Monogenic Diabetes Registry (RRID:SCR_015883) Copy
Ratings or validation data are available for this resource
https://github.com/BodenmillerGroup/imctools
Software Python package that implements preprocessing pipeline for imaging mass cytometry data. Can convert IMC raw files to tiff files that are used as inputs into CellProfiller, Ilastik, Fiji etc.
Proper citation: imctools (RRID:SCR_017132) Copy
Ratings or validation data are available for this resource
http://iidp.coh.org/Default.aspx
The goal of the Integrated Islet Distribution Program (IIDP) is to work with the leading islet isolation centers in the U.S. to distribute high quality human islets to the diabetes research community, in order to advance scientific discoveries and translational medicine.
Proper citation: Integrated Islet Distribution Program (IIDP) (RRID:SCR_014387) Copy
http://www.diabetes-translation.org
Centers that are part of an integrated program whose cores support and enhance diabetes type II translation research. The CDTRs aim to enhance the efficiency, productivity, effectiveness and multidisciplinary nature of diabetes translation research.
Proper citation: Centers for Diabetes Translation Research (RRID:SCR_015149) Copy
http://globalprojects.ucsf.edu/project/novel-small-molecule-therapies-cystic-fibrosis
Research center that focuses on developing novel therapies for cystic fibrosis, enhancing research projects examining the mechanisms of the disease, and developing new small-molecule therapies that can be translated into the clinic.
Proper citation: Cystic Fibrosis Center - University of California San Francisco (RRID:SCR_015398) Copy
https://maayanlab.cloud/sigcom-lincs
Web server that serves over million gene expression signatures processed, analyzed, and visualized from LINCS, GTEx, and GEO. Data and metadata search engine for gene expression signatures.
Proper citation: SigCom LINCS (RRID:SCR_022275) Copy
https://github.com/zdk123/SpiecEasi
Software R package for microbiome network analysis. Used for inference of microbial ecological networks from amplicon sequencing datasets. Combines data transformations developed for compositional data analysis with graphical model inference framework that assumes underlying ecological association network is sparse.
Proper citation: SpiecEasi (RRID:SCR_022712) Copy
Center whose goals include fostering collaboration among basic and clinical investigators, facilitating the use of new technologies in the study of treatment of digestive diseases, and providing education and training for improved treatment and diagnosis.
Proper citation: University of Chicago Digestive Diseases Research Core Center (RRID:SCR_015601) Copy
http://www.bsc.gwu.edu/dpp/index.htmlvdoc
Multicenter clinical research study aimed at discovering whether modest weight loss through dietary changes and increased physical activity or treatment with the oral diabetes drug metformin (Glucophage) could prevent or delay the onset of type 2 diabetes in study participants. At the beginning of the DPP, all 3,234 study participants were overweight and had blood glucose levels higher than normal but not high enough for a diagnosis of diabetesa condition called prediabetes. In addition, 45 percent of the participants were from minority groups-African American, Alaska Native, American Indian, Asian American, Hispanic/Latino, or Pacific Islander-at increased risk of developing diabetes. The DPP found that participants who lost a modest amount of weight through dietary changes and increased physical activity sharply reduced their chances of developing diabetes. Taking metformin also reduced risk, although less dramatically. In the DPP, participants from 27 clinical centers around the United States were randomly divided into different treatment groups. The first group, called the lifestyle intervention group, received intensive training in diet, physical activity, and behavior modification. By eating less fat and fewer calories and exercising for a total of 150 minutes a week, they aimed to lose 7 percent of their body weight and maintain that loss. The second group took 850 mg of metformin twice a day. The third group received placebo pills instead of metformin. The metformin and placebo groups also received information about diet and exercise but no intensive motivational counseling. A fourth group was treated with the drug troglitazone (Rezulin), but this part of the study was discontinued after researchers discovered that troglitazone can cause serious liver damage. The participants in this group were followed but not included as one of the intervention groups. In the years since the DPP was completed, further analyses of DPP data continue to yield important insights into the value of lifestyle changes in helping people prevent type 2 diabetes and associated conditions. For example, one analysis confirmed that DPP participants carrying two copies of a gene variant, or mutation, that significantly increased their risk of developing diabetes benefited from lifestyle changes as much as or more than those without the gene variant. Another analysis found that weight loss was the main predictor of reduced risk for developing diabetes in DPP lifestyle intervention group participants. The authors concluded that diabetes risk reduction efforts should focus on weight loss, which is helped by increased exercise.
Proper citation: Diabetes Prevention Program (RRID:SCR_001501) Copy
Resource enables integrative exploration of genetic and epigenetic basis of development of Type 2 Diabetes, together with other associated functional, molecular and clinical data, centered in biology and role of pancreatic beta cells.The gene expression regulatory variation landscape of human pancreatic islets.
Proper citation: TIGER Data Portal (RRID:SCR_023626) Copy
https://github.com/caleblareau/mgatk
Software python-based command line interface for processing .bam files with mitochondrial reads and generating high-quality heteroplasmy estimation from sequencing data. This package places a special emphasis on mitochondrial genotypes generated from single-cell genomics data, primarily mtscATAC-seq, but is generally applicable across other assays.
Proper citation: mgatk (RRID:SCR_021159) Copy
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