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Link to original content: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GeneLab
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GeneLab

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

GeneLab is an open-access,[1] collaborative analysis platform for space bioscience research.[2][3] GeneLab aims to maximize the research resulting from experiments aboard the International Space Station (ISS) by collecting and providing access to data from genomic, transcriptomic, proteomic, and metabolomics studies aboard ISS.[4] The Space Biosciences Division at NASA's Ames Research Center runs GeneLab.[5]

The GeneLab project is both a science collaboration initiative to maximize the omics data collected from spaceflight and from ground simulations of microgravity and radiation experiments; and a data system effort to establish a public bioinformatics repository and collaborative analysis platform for these data.[4]

GeneLab houses data from spaceflight experiments and related ground-based studies conducted on a variety of organisms including: mouse, plants, fruit fly, cultured cells, nematodes, bacteria and fungi. The data are publicly available for download, and enable researchers to ask questions about how the spaceflight environment causes changes in the RNA, DNA and proteins, the building blocks of life.[6]

Because no single analysis can fully unravel the complexities of fundamental biology, GeneLab provides access to data from multiple experiments and at multiple layers of omics analysis that can be analyzed in an integrated fashion to obtain a more complete understanding of how biological systems adapt to spaceflight, leading to advances for life on Earth and beyond.[7]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Tenenbaum, David. "UW team's plants return to Earth after growing in space". Wisc.edu. Retrieved 25 May 2016.
  2. ^ Dueck, Sandy. "Observing how microbes adapt in a spaceflight environment". Space Daily. Retrieved 25 May 2016.
  3. ^ Lamb, Annette. "Resources for Teacher Librarians, Classroom Teachers, Students, and Parents" (PDF). ScholarWorks. Retrieved 13 July 2016.
  4. ^ a b "Features: A biochemist in space". www.asbmb.org. Retrieved 2016-07-13.
  5. ^ "Data Repository | NASA GeneLab". genelab.nasa.gov. Retrieved 2016-07-13.
  6. ^ "Building a worldwide genetic library BRIC-by-BRIC". Retrieved 2016-07-13.
  7. ^ "GeneLAB research platform to expand life sciences research on station". Retrieved 2016-07-13.
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