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Challenges of molecular nutrition research 6: the nutritional phenotype database to store, share and evaluate nutritional systems biology studies

The challenge of modern nutrition and health research is to identify food-based strategies promoting life-long optimal health and well-being. This research is complex because it exploits a multitude of bioactive compounds acting on an extensive network of interacting processes. Whereas nutrition res...

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Autores principales: van Ommen, Ben, Bouwman, Jildau, Dragsted, Lars O., Drevon, Christian A., Elliott, Ruan, de Groot, Philip, Kaput, Jim, Mathers, John C., Müller, Michael, Pepping, Fre, Saito, Jahn, Scalbert, Augustin, Radonjic, Marijana, Rocca-Serra, Philippe, Travis, Anthony, Wopereis, Suzan, Evelo, Chris T.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer-Verlag 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2935528/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21052526
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12263-010-0167-9
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author van Ommen, Ben
Bouwman, Jildau
Dragsted, Lars O.
Drevon, Christian A.
Elliott, Ruan
de Groot, Philip
Kaput, Jim
Mathers, John C.
Müller, Michael
Pepping, Fre
Saito, Jahn
Scalbert, Augustin
Radonjic, Marijana
Rocca-Serra, Philippe
Travis, Anthony
Wopereis, Suzan
Evelo, Chris T.
author_facet van Ommen, Ben
Bouwman, Jildau
Dragsted, Lars O.
Drevon, Christian A.
Elliott, Ruan
de Groot, Philip
Kaput, Jim
Mathers, John C.
Müller, Michael
Pepping, Fre
Saito, Jahn
Scalbert, Augustin
Radonjic, Marijana
Rocca-Serra, Philippe
Travis, Anthony
Wopereis, Suzan
Evelo, Chris T.
author_sort van Ommen, Ben
collection PubMed
description The challenge of modern nutrition and health research is to identify food-based strategies promoting life-long optimal health and well-being. This research is complex because it exploits a multitude of bioactive compounds acting on an extensive network of interacting processes. Whereas nutrition research can profit enormously from the revolution in ‘omics’ technologies, it has discipline-specific requirements for analytical and bioinformatic procedures. In addition to measurements of the parameters of interest (measures of health), extensive description of the subjects of study and foods or diets consumed is central for describing the nutritional phenotype. We propose and pursue an infrastructural activity of constructing the “Nutritional Phenotype database” (dbNP). When fully developed, dbNP will be a research and collaboration tool and a publicly available data and knowledge repository. Creation and implementation of the dbNP will maximize benefits to the research community by enabling integration and interrogation of data from multiple studies, from different research groups, different countries and different—omics levels. The dbNP is designed to facilitate storage of biologically relevant, pre-processed—omics data, as well as study descriptive and study participant phenotype data. It is also important to enable the combination of this information at different levels (e.g. to facilitate linkage of data describing participant phenotype, genotype and food intake with information on study design and—omics measurements, and to combine all of this with existing knowledge). The biological information stored in the database (i.e. genetics, transcriptomics, proteomics, biomarkers, metabolomics, functional assays, food intake and food composition) is tailored to nutrition research and embedded in an environment of standard procedures and protocols, annotations, modular data-basing, networking and integrated bioinformatics. The dbNP is an evolving enterprise, which is only sustainable if it is accepted and adopted by the wider nutrition and health research community as an open source, pre-competitive and publicly available resource where many partners both can contribute and profit from its developments. We introduce the Nutrigenomics Organisation (NuGO, http://www.nugo.org) as a membership association responsible for establishing and curating the dbNP. Within NuGO, all efforts related to dbNP (i.e. usage, coordination, integration, facilitation and maintenance) will be directed towards a sustainable and federated infrastructure.
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spelling pubmed-29355282010-09-10 Challenges of molecular nutrition research 6: the nutritional phenotype database to store, share and evaluate nutritional systems biology studies van Ommen, Ben Bouwman, Jildau Dragsted, Lars O. Drevon, Christian A. Elliott, Ruan de Groot, Philip Kaput, Jim Mathers, John C. Müller, Michael Pepping, Fre Saito, Jahn Scalbert, Augustin Radonjic, Marijana Rocca-Serra, Philippe Travis, Anthony Wopereis, Suzan Evelo, Chris T. Genes Nutr Review The challenge of modern nutrition and health research is to identify food-based strategies promoting life-long optimal health and well-being. This research is complex because it exploits a multitude of bioactive compounds acting on an extensive network of interacting processes. Whereas nutrition research can profit enormously from the revolution in ‘omics’ technologies, it has discipline-specific requirements for analytical and bioinformatic procedures. In addition to measurements of the parameters of interest (measures of health), extensive description of the subjects of study and foods or diets consumed is central for describing the nutritional phenotype. We propose and pursue an infrastructural activity of constructing the “Nutritional Phenotype database” (dbNP). When fully developed, dbNP will be a research and collaboration tool and a publicly available data and knowledge repository. Creation and implementation of the dbNP will maximize benefits to the research community by enabling integration and interrogation of data from multiple studies, from different research groups, different countries and different—omics levels. The dbNP is designed to facilitate storage of biologically relevant, pre-processed—omics data, as well as study descriptive and study participant phenotype data. It is also important to enable the combination of this information at different levels (e.g. to facilitate linkage of data describing participant phenotype, genotype and food intake with information on study design and—omics measurements, and to combine all of this with existing knowledge). The biological information stored in the database (i.e. genetics, transcriptomics, proteomics, biomarkers, metabolomics, functional assays, food intake and food composition) is tailored to nutrition research and embedded in an environment of standard procedures and protocols, annotations, modular data-basing, networking and integrated bioinformatics. The dbNP is an evolving enterprise, which is only sustainable if it is accepted and adopted by the wider nutrition and health research community as an open source, pre-competitive and publicly available resource where many partners both can contribute and profit from its developments. We introduce the Nutrigenomics Organisation (NuGO, http://www.nugo.org) as a membership association responsible for establishing and curating the dbNP. Within NuGO, all efforts related to dbNP (i.e. usage, coordination, integration, facilitation and maintenance) will be directed towards a sustainable and federated infrastructure. Springer-Verlag 2010-02-03 /pmc/articles/PMC2935528/ /pubmed/21052526 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12263-010-0167-9 Text en © The Author(s) 2010 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited.
spellingShingle Review
van Ommen, Ben
Bouwman, Jildau
Dragsted, Lars O.
Drevon, Christian A.
Elliott, Ruan
de Groot, Philip
Kaput, Jim
Mathers, John C.
Müller, Michael
Pepping, Fre
Saito, Jahn
Scalbert, Augustin
Radonjic, Marijana
Rocca-Serra, Philippe
Travis, Anthony
Wopereis, Suzan
Evelo, Chris T.
Challenges of molecular nutrition research 6: the nutritional phenotype database to store, share and evaluate nutritional systems biology studies
title Challenges of molecular nutrition research 6: the nutritional phenotype database to store, share and evaluate nutritional systems biology studies
title_full Challenges of molecular nutrition research 6: the nutritional phenotype database to store, share and evaluate nutritional systems biology studies
title_fullStr Challenges of molecular nutrition research 6: the nutritional phenotype database to store, share and evaluate nutritional systems biology studies
title_full_unstemmed Challenges of molecular nutrition research 6: the nutritional phenotype database to store, share and evaluate nutritional systems biology studies
title_short Challenges of molecular nutrition research 6: the nutritional phenotype database to store, share and evaluate nutritional systems biology studies
title_sort challenges of molecular nutrition research 6: the nutritional phenotype database to store, share and evaluate nutritional systems biology studies
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2935528/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21052526
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12263-010-0167-9
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