8 research outputs found

    diXa: a data infrastructure for chemical safety assessment

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    Motivation: The field of toxicogenomics (the application of ‘-omics' technologies to risk assessment of compound toxicities) has expanded in the last decade, partly driven by new legislation, aimed at reducing animal testing in chemical risk assessment but mainly as a result of a paradigm change in toxicology towards the use and integration of genome wide data. Many research groups worldwide have generated large amounts of such toxicogenomics data. However, there is no centralized repository for archiving and making these data and associated tools for their analysis easily available. Results: The Data Infrastructure for Chemical Safety Assessment (diXa) is a robust and sustainable infrastructure storing toxicogenomics data. A central data warehouse is connected to a portal with links to chemical information and molecular and phenotype data. diXa is publicly available through a user-friendly web interface. New data can be readily deposited into diXa using guidelines and templates available online. Analysis descriptions and tools for interrogating the data are available via the diXa portal. Availability and implementation: http://www.dixa-fp7.eu Contact: [email protected]; [email protected] Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics onlin

    Micro-topographies induce epigenetic reprogramming and quiescence in human mesenchymal stem cells

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    Biomaterials can control cell and nuclear morphology. Since the shape of the nucleus influences chromatin architecture, gene expression, and cell identity, surface topography can control cell phenotype. This study explores how surface topography influences nuclear morphology, histone modifications, and expression of histone-associated proteins through advanced histone mass spectrometry and microarray analysis. We found that nuclear confinement is associated with loss of both histone acetylation and nucleoli abundance, while pathway analysis revealed a substantial reduction in gene expression associated with chromosome organization. In light of previous observations where we found a decrease in proliferation and metabolism induced by micro-topographies, we connect these findings with a quiescent phenotype in mesenchymal stem cells, as further shown by a reduction of ribosomal proteins and the maintenance of multipotency on micro-topographies after long-term culture conditions. Furthermore, this influence of micro-topographies on nuclear morphology and proliferation was reversible, as shown by a full return of proliferation when re-cultured on a flat surface. Our findings provide novel insights on how biophysical signaling influences nuclear organization and subsequent cellular phenotype

    diXa: a Data Infrastructure for Chemical Safety Assessment

    No full text
    Motivation: The field of toxicogenomics (the application of ‘-omics’ technologies to risk assessment of compound toxicities) has expanded in the last decade, partly driven by new legislation, aimed at reducing animal testing in chemical risk assessment but mainly as a result of a paradigm change in toxicology towards the use and integration of genome wide data. Many research groups worldwide have generated large amounts of such toxicogenomics data. However, there is no centralized repository for archiving and making these data and associated tools for their analysis easily available. Results: The Data Infrastructure for Chemical Safety Assessment (diXa) is a robust and sustainable infrastructure storing toxicogenomics data. A central data warehouse is connected to a portal with links to chemical information and molecular and phenotype data. diXa is publicly available through a user-friendly web interface. New data can be readily deposited into diXa using guidelines and templates available online. Analysis descriptions and tools for interrogating the data are available via the diXa portal.JRC.I.5-Systems Toxicolog
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