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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.
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
Biospecimen repository of normal and diseased human material from a variety of tissues and conditions along with clinical annotation. Both frozen aliquots and paraffin embedded tissue are available. Biospecimens are available to qualified researchers with IRB approval. * Preliminary inquires please contact Cheryl Spencer at cheryl.spencer (at) bmc.org
Proper citation: Boston University Biospecimen Archive Research Core (RRID:SCR_005363) Copy
This colony provides a national resource of rhesus monkeys and their tissues to carry out research benefiting the scientific community. The RMBRR maintains a colony of monkeys that have been derived to be specific pathogen free for members of both the herpes and retrovirus families. Over its history, the RMBRR has developed specialized management techniques, housing facilities and highly trained staff to avail these purposefully bred laboratory models, which are 93% genetically identical to humans, to researchers worldwide. Historically, this animal model has been instrumental in research involving blood classification, polio vaccine development, and drug safety and efficacy while currently they are the preferred model for studying the mechanisms of immunodeficiency diseases. Their susceptibility to Simian Immunodeficiency Virus and their homology to the human major histocompatibility complex (MHC) Class I, II and TCR genes make them valuable in HIV research. They are currently the models of choice for HIV/AIDS vaccine development and study. Other areas of research include atherosclerosis, myocarditis, alcoholism, diabetes, cancer and aging. The overall objectives of this resource are to improve the resources available at the RMBRR and to conduct resource-relevant research that improves both the health of the rhesus colony and its usefulness for studies of human disease. The Resource and Management Core is responsible for providing animal resources, tissues/biological fluids, cell lines, expert advice and research support to NIH extramural and intramural programs, other federal agencies and to private sponsors. The Resource-Related Research Core conducts research to improve the health of the animals maintained with special emphasis on studies that will enhance the usefulness of the rhesus as a model for studies of human disease.
Proper citation: Rhesus Monkey Breeding and Research (RRID:SCR_008357) 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
http://diabetes.niddk.nih.gov/dm/pubs/control/index.aspx
Clinical study that showed that keeping blood glucose levels as close to normal as possible slows the onset and progression of eye, kidney, and nerve diseases caused by diabetes. EDIC is a follow-up study of people who participated in DCCT. The DCCT involved 1,441 volunteers, ages 13 to 39, with type 1 diabetes and 29 medical centers in the United States and Canada. Volunteers had to have had diabetes for at least 1 year but no longer than 15 years. They also were required to have no, or only early signs of, diabetic eye disease. The study compared the effects of standard control of blood glucose versus intensive control on the complications of diabetes. Intensive control meant keeping hemoglobin A1C levels as close as possible to the normal value of 6 percent or less. The A1C blood test reflects a person''''s average blood glucose over the last 2 to 3 months. Volunteers were randomly assigned to each treatment group. DCCT Study Findings * Intensive blood glucose control reduces risk of ** eye disease: 76% reduced risk ** kidney disease: 50% reduced risk ** nerve disease: 60% reduced risk When the DCCT ended, researchers continued to study more than 90 percent of participants. The follow-up study, called Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications (EDIC), is assessing the incidence and predictors of cardiovascular disease events such as heart attack, stroke, or needed heart surgery, as well as diabetic complications related to the eye, kidney, and nerves. The EDIC study is also examining the impact of intensive control versus standard control on quality of life. Another objective is to look at the cost-effectiveness of intensive control. EDIC Study Findings * Intensive blood glucose control reduces risk of ** any cardiovascular disease event: 42% reduced risk ** nonfatal heart attack, stroke, or death from cardiovascular causes: 57% reduced risk
Proper citation: Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (RRID:SCR_006805) Copy
https://www.baderc.org/cores/metaboliccore/
Core in BADERC that provides services in consultation and teaching, use of DEXA scanner for determination of body fat and/or bone density, and use of Coulter Counter to measure cell number and cell size distribution.
Proper citation: Boston Area Diabetes Endocrinology Research Center Metabolic Physiology and Energy Balance Core Facility (RRID:SCR_008293) Copy
http://harvard.eagle-i.net/i/0000012e-6d67-5282-55da-381e80000000
Core facility that provides the following services: Autoantibody determination, HLA typing and Genotyping for the best recognized susceptibility loci (INS, PTPN22, CTLA4).
The Human Sample Procurement Core will support translational research endeavors within the JDRF Center by providing the Center''s laboratories access to well-characterized blood samples from patients with diabetes at different stages of the disease. This availability will greatly facilitate the translational exploration of concepts and targets emerging from the basic research projects. Individuals with T1D (recent onset, long-standing Type-1 diabetes) and matched controls (healthy or T2D) will be recruited from the patient population at the Joslin Diabetes Center and neighboring institutions. The Core will perform and record a basic characterization of patients and their samples. This analysis will include a thorough evaluation of clinical characteristics from a diabetes and autoimmune standpoint, and an immunogenetic workup (outsourced to Joslin or other cores): autoantibody determination, HLA typing and genotyping for the best recognized susceptibility loci (INS, PTPN22, CTLA4). A relational database will be adapted to record all patient information, copies of which will be provided in a de-identified manner to the investigators.
Proper citation: HMS Human Sample Procurement Core Facility (RRID:SCR_009797) Copy
http://harvard.eagle-i.net/i/0000012a-25bf-69ed-f5ed-943080000000
Core facility that provides the following services: Maintainence and dissemination of transgenic and mutant mice.
The Genetically Modified NOD Mouse Core provides Center investigators, as well as researchers elsewhere, with access to transgenic and mutant lines derived from the NOD mouse model: some will be generated within the Core; others are established lines of proven experimental value that are maintained in the Core. The Core will construct transgenic mice in strains that have a high susceptibility to diabetes (in particular in the NOD line). This includes trangenesis by conventional pronuclear injection or by delivery of RNAi cassettes on lentiviral vectors. The Core will also provide a panel of existing transgenic and mutant lines. These lines are chosen because of their established interest in allowing the dissection of immunological tolerance in Type 1 Diabetes, and in response to Center investigator needs.
Proper citation: HMS Genetically Modified NOD Mouse Core Facility (RRID:SCR_009796) Copy
https://joslinresearch.org/drc-cores/Flow-Cytometry-Core
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on October 27,2023. Core that provides cell sorting and flow cytometry services. Specific services include cell analysis, large object sorting,magnetic cell enrichment, and automatic cell counting.
Proper citation: Joslin Diabetes Center Flow Cytometry Core Facility (RRID:SCR_009878) Copy
https://joslinresearch.org/drc-cores/Animal-Physiology-Core
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on October 27,2023. Core that provides technically advanced physiological evaluation of metabolism in diabetes, obesity, and their associated complications in rodents for DRC investigators and outside users. It also provides training of investigators and trainees in several physiological procedures.
Proper citation: Joslin Diabetes Center Animal Physiology Core Facility (RRID:SCR_009876) Copy
https://joslinresearch.org/drc-cores/Advanced-Microscopy-Core
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on October 27,2023. Core that provides services for performing specific morphological procedures, providing training and access to equipment, maintaining the specialized microscopes, and giving advice and interpretation.
Proper citation: Joslin Diabetes Center Advanced Microscopy Core Facility (RRID:SCR_009875) Copy
https://joslinresearch.org/drc-cores/Advanced-Genomics-and-Genetics-Core
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on October 27,2023. Core that provides services for genetic and genomic analysis, including DNA extraction from blood, access to DNA collections from the Core?s repository, SNP genotyping, and support for gene expression studies based on both high-density oligonucleotide arrays and real-time quantitative PCR.
Proper citation: Joslin Diabetes Center Advanced Genomics and Genetics Core Facility (RRID:SCR_009873) Copy
http://jsu.eagle-i.net/i/0000012c-1c64-7caa-a830-7bcf80000000
The JHS is the largest single-site longitudinal, population-based, cohort study of 5,302 persons initiated in the fall of 2000 to prospectively investigate the determinants of CVD among African Americans in the Jackson, MS metropolitan statistical area. The JHS investigates the various genotype and phenotype factors that affect high blood pressure, heart disease, strokes, diabetes and other important diseases in African Americans. The primary objective of the Jackson Heart Study is to investigate the causes of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in African Americans to learn how to best prevent this group of diseases in the future. More specific objectives include: 1. Identification of factors, which influence the development, and worsening of CVD in African Americans, with an emphasis on manifestations related to high blood pressure (such as remodeling of the left ventricle of the heart, coronary artery disease, heart failure, stroke and disorders affecting the blood vessels of the kidney). 2. Building research capabilities in minority institutions at the undergraduate and graduate level by developing partnerships between minority and majority institutions and enhancing participation of minority investigators in large-scale epidemiologic studies. 3. Attracting minority students to and preparing them for careers in health sciences.
Proper citation: Jackson Heart Study (RRID:SCR_009902) Copy
http://www.med.upenn.edu/idom/drc/cores/ria.html
Core which offers high quality immunoassay services to basic, translational, and clinical investigators performing diabetes and related metabolic disease research. The core also provides consultation and training and education services.
Proper citation: Penn Diabetes Research Center Radioimmunoassay and Biomarkers Core Facility (RRID:SCR_010028) Copy
https://labnodes.vanderbilt.edu/community/profile/id/2229
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on October 30,2023. Core facility that provides any Vanderbilt researcher with access to imaging equipment and expert technical support for microscopy and analysis of tissue and cellular physiology.
Proper citation: Vanderbilt Diabetes Research and Training Center Cell Imaging Shared Resource Core Facility (RRID:SCR_010165) Copy
https://labnodes.vanderbilt.edu/community/profile/id/2230
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on October 30,2023. Core facility that supports diabetes, endocrine, and metabolic research across a range of species. Its objective is to provide sensitive, reproducible, and inexpensive analyses of hormones, amino acids, and other relevant chemicals.
Proper citation: Vanderbilt Diabetes Research and Training Center Hormone Assay and Analytical Services Core Facility (RRID:SCR_010181) Copy
Consortium serving the diabetic complications community that sponsors annual meetings in complications-relevant scientific areas, solicits and funds pilot projects in high impact areas of complications research, and provides resources and data including animal models, protocols and methods, validation criteria, reagents and resources, histology, publications and bioinformatics for researchers conducting diabetic complications research.
Proper citation: Diabetic Complications Consortium (RRID:SCR_001415) 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
https://t1dexchange.org/research/biobank/
Collection of biological samples linked to participant medical data from individuals living with type 1 diabetes. Unifies samples and data from eight different clinical studies related to type 1 diabetes.
Proper citation: T1D Exchange Biobank (RRID:SCR_017195) Copy
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