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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://www.med.upenn.edu/idom/drc/cores/cellbio.html
Core that gives support including experimental design, islet isolation, and performance of and training in an expansive range of assays for physiological and morphometric assessment of pancreatic islet function and growth. It contributes to the basic and translational research activities of the Institute of Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism (IDOM) at the Perelman School of Medicine of the University of Pennsylvania. Its services include perform individual islet and single cell fluorescence imaging, respirometry with islet batches using a Seahorse Extracellular Flux Analyzer, perifusion coupled with respirometry, and closed respirometry experiments for our investigators.
Proper citation: University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine Penn Diabetes Research Center Pancreatic Islet Cell Biology Core Facility (RRID:SCR_008265) Copy
https://labnodes.vanderbilt.edu/community/profile/id/1133
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on October 30,2023. Core facility that provides training and expertise in nutrition/diet methodology to obtain valid and reliable assessment and analyses of dietary intakes, nutritional status, body composition and metabolism.
Proper citation: Vanderbilt Diabetes Research and Training Center Vanderbilt Diet Body Composition and Metabolism Core Facility (RRID:SCR_010191) Copy
Provides services including sequencing library preparation and sequencing on Illumina MiSeq and NovaSeq 6000 platforms. Supports single cell sequencing on 10X Genomics Chromium Controller. Provides Illumina Infinium Beadchips, which includes variety of whole genome genotyping arrays as well as Infinium MethylationEPIC BeadChip.
Proper citation: University of California at San Diego Institute for Genomic Medicine Genomics Center Core Facilitiy (RRID:SCR_022740) Copy
https://ncdiabetesresearch.org/metabolomics
Provides platform for quantitative targeted metabolic profiling by MS/MS and GC/MS, supported by library of stable isotope labeled standards as well as extensive scientific expertise to help researchers navigate core resources and use of services.
Proper citation: North Carolina Diabetes Research Center Metabolomics Core Facility (RRID:SCR_022909) Copy
https://ncdiabetesresearch.org/genomics
Provides resources and expertise in genomics and mass spectrometry at Wake Forest Center for Precision Medicine. Provides unique access to instrumentation and analytical expertise to NCDRC faculty in support of advancement of diabetes research.Overlooks the use of existing resources at NCDRC partner institutions (UNC, NC A&T, and Duke University) to coordinate work and data analysis with Metabolomics Core to provide omics analyses.Offers analytic services, expertise, and tools to integrate data to better understand interactive systems at play in disease processes.
Proper citation: North Carolina Diabetes Research Center Genomics and Proteomics Core Facility (RRID:SCR_022907) Copy
Core facilitates access and usage of tissues and services to meet specialized needs of diabetes research community to expedite and catalyze innovative diabetes research at UC AMC. Provides resources to assist DRC investigators with acquisition and processing of rodent and human tissue, and specialized cell lines that are broadly required for diabetes research.
Proper citation: University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus Diabetes Research Center Tissue Procurement and Processing Core Facility (RRID:SCR_022904) Copy
https://www.bioconductor.org/packages/release/bioc/html/HiCDCPlus.html
Software package for Hi-C/HiChIP interaction calling and differential analysis using efficient implementation of HiC-DC statistical framework. Enables principled statistical analysis of Hi-C and HiChIP data sets. Enables systematic 3D interaction calls and differential analysis for Hi-C and HiChIP
Proper citation: HiCDCPlus (RRID:SCR_025317) Copy
https://repository.niddk.nih.gov/study/36
Data set and biosepecimens of a multi-center clinical trial to determine if treatment with beta-cell antigens can delay the onset of Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus (Type 1 DM) in non-diabetic relatives of persons with Type 1 DM. Insulin is a well characterized antigen specifically produced by beta-cells, and it was used for this purpose in the initial DPT-1 studies. The protocol for high risk subjects uses daily subcutaneous insulin injections and an annual course of intravenous insulin treatment, while the protocol for intermediate risk subjects uses daily doses of insulin administered orally. Neither injected nor oral insulin at the doses used were observed to delay or prevent diabetes, although further studies are needed to test whether oral insulin can delay diabetes in people in the intermediate risk group with high titers of insulin autoantibodies.
Proper citation: Diabetes Prevention Type 1 (RRID:SCR_001467) Copy
https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT00360646
Prospective and retrospective registry of well-characterized cases of drug-induced liver disease. The goals of Network include the development of standardized procedures to identify and fully characterize bona fide cases of drug- and complementary and alternative medicines (CAM)-induced liver injury, and to conduct controlled, clinical studies that will include extensive collection of data, serum, DNA, and tissue specimens. Cases of liver injury due to herbal medications are also included. The network will also develop terminology and standardized definitions for DILI, and to develop causality assessment instruments that are sensitive, specific, and reproducible. DILIN is funded by a cooperative agreement and includes five clinical centers and a central data coordinating center. The research goals of DILIN are to: * Create a registry of carefully documented DILI cases * Identify clinical, immunological, and environmental risk factors for drug- and CAM-mediated hepatotoxicity * Create a bank of biological specimens consisting of DNA, plasma, and immortalized lymphocytes to facilitate detailed genetic analyses * Characterize the natural history of drug- and CAM-induced DILI for at least six months following enrollment * Develop the capability to recontact these individuals over an extended period of time so that additional studies exploring DILI mechanisms can be performed Two studies are being initiated by the network. In the Retrospective Study, the implicated drugs are restricted to isoniazid, phenytoin, combination clavulanic acid/amoxicillin, and valproic acid (Depakote), Nitrofurantoin, Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, Minocycline, and Quinolone antibiotics. These drugs were chosen because they are frequently administered to patients not receiving other hepatotoxic drugs, making it easier to establish causality. Patients must be alive, and the date of onset of the DILI episode must be on or after January 1, 1994. In the Prospective Study, all incident cases of drug- and CAM-induced liver injury are being considered. Initial presentation to a healthcare professional must be within the previous six months. A detailed medication history of the implicated DILI drug together with all prescription, OTC, and herbal medications is being recorded. Liver and serological tests are being performed to characterize the injury and to exclude competing causes of liver injury. A blood sample is also being drawn for plasma storage and DNA isolation. These cases will be followed longitudinally to characterize the long-term effects of the DILI episode. For both studies, documented, clinically significant DILI must be recorded in the patient's medical charts so that a causal determination can be made. Patients will be excluded if they are unwilling or unable to provide a blood sample or participate in the genetics component. Children under two years of age at the time of enrollment are excluded due to blood-volume requirements. If you have patients who are eligible to participate in either study, please contact one the DILIN clinical sites. As a general policy, the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) invites investigator-initiated research project applications for ancillary studies to ongoing, large-scale clinical trials, epidemiological studies, and disease databases supported by the Institute. These studies are focused on a wide range of diseases and conditions including diabetes, obesity, acute and chronic liver disease, chronic kidney disease, and benign prostatic hyperplasia, among others.
Proper citation: Drug-Induced Liver Injury Network (RRID:SCR_001524) Copy
http://www.prostatitis.org/symptomindex.html
Questionnaire developed by physicians in NIDDK's Chronic Prostatitis Collaborative Research Network that can help physicians to accurately measure the severity of prostatitis symptoms and their impact on a patient's lifestyle. The CPSI questionnaire assesses pain, urination, and the effect of chronic prostatitis on daily activities. With this information, researchers and physicians can reliably evaluate whether potential treatments are working. The questionnaire was originally published in the Journal of Urology in August 1999 (Vol. 162, pages 369-375). It is available as a PDF document in English, Spanish, German and Korean.
Proper citation: NIH Chronic Prostatitis Symptom Index (RRID:SCR_001482) Copy
Repository of person centered measures that evaluates and monitors physical, mental, and social health in adults and children.
Proper citation: Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (RRID:SCR_004718) Copy
http://www.niaid.nih.gov/about/organization/dait/pages/csgadp.aspx
Collaborative network of investigators with a focus on prevention of autoimmune disease, defined as halting the development of autoimmune disease prior to clinical onset by means other than global immunosuppression, and an emphasis on Type 1 diabetes. Its mission is to engage in scientific discovery that significantly advances knowledge for the prevention and regulation of autoimmune disease. The specific goals enunciated in pursuit of this mission are: * To create improved models of disease pathogenesis and therapy to better understand immune mechanisms that will provide opportunities for prevention strategies * To use these models as validation platforms with which to test new tools applicable to human studies * To encourage core expertise and collaborative projects designed for rapid translation from animal to human studies, emphasizing the development of surrogate markers for disease progression and/or regulation which can be utilized in the context of clinical trials
Proper citation: Cooperative Study Group for Autoimmune Disease Prevention (RRID:SCR_006803) Copy
https://labnodes.vanderbilt.edu/community/profile/id/2228
THIS RESOURCE IS NO LONGER IN SERVICE. Documented on August 13,2025.Core facility that provides access to isolated pancreatic islets from normal and diabetic models and performs islet functional analysis. The IPA Core also provides solutions for high-resolution whole slide imaging and access to image analysis tools for quantitative assessment of pancreatic islet morphology.
Proper citation: Vanderbilt Diabetes Research and Training Center Islet Procurement and Analysis Core (RRID:SCR_000896) Copy
http://www.med.upenn.edu/idom/drc/cores/mouse.html
Core which provides researchers with resources for performing metabolic studies in mice. It also provides services, innovative techniques, and helpful consultation to both experienced and novice investigators with regards to metabolic questions.
Proper citation: Penn Diabetes Research Center Mouse Phenotyping Physiology and Metabolism Core (RRID:SCR_000888) Copy
http://www.t1diabetes.nih.gov/t1d-raid/index.shtml
NOTE: The T1D-RAID program is not currently accepting applications. Cooperative program that makes available, on a competitive basis, NCI resources for the pre-clinical development of drugs, natural products, and biologics to facilitate translation to the clinic of novel, scientifically meritorious therapeutic interventions for type 1 diabetes and its complications. A partial listing of those services includes: high-throughput screening, studies in animal models, formulation, pharmacology and toxicology studies, and bulk substances acquisition. Requests to T1D-RAID are brief (20 pages or less), and should clearly outline the resources required to ready the proposed therapeutic agent for clinical trials. T1D-RAID should enable entry into the clinic of promising molecules that are not otherwise likely to receive an adequate and timely clinical test. T1D-RAID is designed to accomplish the tasks that are rate-limiting in bringing discoveries from the laboratory to the clinic. Once a project has been approved, NIDDKstaff interact directly with the Principal Investigator (PI). NCI contractors perform the T1D-RAID-approved tasks under the direction of NIDDKand NCI staff. The required tasks will vary from project to project. In some cases T1D-RAID will support only one or two key missing steps necessary to bring a compound to the clinic; in other cases it may be necessary to supply the entire portfolio of development requirements needed to file an IND. Examples of tasks that can be supported by T1D-RAID include, but are not limited to: * Definition or optimization of dose and schedule for in vivo activity * Development of pharmacology assays * Conduct of pharmacology studies with a pre-determined assay * Acquisition of bulk substance (GMP and non-GMP) * Scale-up production from lab-scale to clinical-trials lot scale * Development of suitable formulations * Development of analytical methods for bulk substances * Production of dosage forms * Stability assurance of dosage forms * Range-finding initial toxicology * IND-directed toxicology, with correlative pharmacology and histopathology * Planning of clinical trials * Regulatory affairs, so that FDA requirements are likely to be satisfied by participating investigators seeking to test new molecular entities in the clinic * IND filing advice The output of T1D-RAID activities will be both products and information that will be made fully available to the originating investigator for support of an IND application and clinical trials. T1D-RAID does not sponsor clinical trials.
Proper citation: Type 1 Diabetes - Rapid Access to Intervention Development (RRID:SCR_000203) Copy
http://www.bsc.gwu.edu/dpp/protocol.htmlvdoc
Observational clinical trial studying the long term effect of diet and exercise and the diabetes medication, metformin, on the delay of type 2 diabetes in participants of the Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP). The Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) was a multi-center trial examining the ability of an intensive lifestyle or metformin to prevent or delay the development of diabetes in a high risk population due to the presence of impaired glucose tolerance (IGT). The DPP has ended early demonstrating that lifestyle reduced diabetes onset by 58% and metformin reduced diabetes onset by 31%. The DPPOS is designed to take advantage of the scientifically and clinically valuable DPP participants. This group of participants is nearly 50% minority and represents the largest IGT population ever studied. Clinically important research questions remain that focus on 1)durability of the prior DPP intervention, 2) determination of the clinical course of precisely known new onset diabetes, in particular regarding CVD, CVD risk factors and atherosclerosis and microvascular disease, 3)close examination of these topics in men vs women and in minority populations. More than 87% of the original surviving DPP cohort has joined DPPOS as of December, 2007 and, to date, after 5 years of DPPOS and 10 years of combined DPP/DPPOS, 93% of the DPPOS cohort continue to attend annual follow-up visits. Interim analyses performed after 5 years of DPPOS have demonstrated a durable effect of diabetes prevention associated with the lifestyle and metformin interventions with 34 and 19% reductions in diabetes incidence, respectively, compared with the placebo group. Interim analyses also reveal significant reductions from baseline in CVD risk factors in the lifestyle intervention group, but with decreased utilization of glucose-lowering and lipid-lowering medications. Analyses of the participants in the placebo group who have developed diabetes during DPP/DPPOS, compared with those who have remained non-diabetic, reveal an increased frequency of retinopathy and microalbuminuria. The current, updated protocol describes the DPPOS including the revisions incorporated to complete the second five-years of the study. DPPOS participants have blood samples stored at the time of each annual visit. Specimens are stored at the study CBL until after the primary study outcomes are reported. DNA samples were previously collected and are stored at the NIDDKsample repository for DPP participants.
Proper citation: Diabetes Prevention Program Outcomes Study (RRID:SCR_001502) Copy
https://github.com/kwanjeeraw/metabox
Software R toolbox for thorough metabolomic data analysis, integration and interpretation. Metabox 2.0 is updated version of R package Metabox and includes several methods for data processing, statistical analysis, biomarker analysis, integrative analysis and data interpretation.
Proper citation: Metabox (RRID:SCR_024443) Copy
http://www.childrennetwork.org/
Database of clinical information and serum and tissue samples from children across the United States and Canada with Biliary Atresia, Idiopathic Neonatal Hepatitis, Cystic Fibrosis Liver Disease, Alagille Syndrome, Alpha-1 Antitrypsin Deficiency, Bile Acid Synthesis Defects, Mitochondrial Hepatopathies, and Progressive Familial Intrahepatic Cholestasis in order to facilitate research and to perform clinical, epidemiological, and therapeutic trials in these important pediatric liver diseases. Three NIDDK-funded consortia, Biliary Atresia Research Consortium (BARC), Cholestatic Liver Disease Consortium (CLiC), and the Cystic Fibrosis Liver Disease (CFLD) Network were consolidated to form ChiLDREN. Most of the ChiLDREN studies are natural history studies aimed at acquiring information and data that will provide a better understanding of these rare conditions. Participants will be asked to allow study personnel to obtain information from medical records and an interview, and to collect blood, urine, and tissue samples when clinically indicated, in order to understand the causes of these diseases and to improve the diagnosis and treatment of children with these diseases. All of the information obtained in these studies is confidential and no names or identifying information are used in the study.
Proper citation: Childhood Liver Disease Research and Education Network (RRID:SCR_001497) Copy
http://www.med.umich.edu/mgpc/cores/vivo.htm
Core facility that consists of the following 4 distinct programs: In Vivo Small Animal Studies Program, Organoid/Enteroid Modeling Program, Biospecimens Banking Service, and Clinical Design and Statistics.
Proper citation: University of Michigan Center for Gastrointestinal Research In Vivo Animal and Human Studies Core (RRID:SCR_015608) Copy
http://www.uchicagoddrcc.org/research-cores/tissue-and-cell-analysis-core
Core whose services include anatomic pathology review of human and experimental animal tissues as well as consultation in the best approaches for such analyses, cost-effective and high quality processing and staining of formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues, and making collections of human tissue and imaging technologies available to researchers.
Proper citation: University of Chicago Digestive Diseases Research Core Center Tissue and Cell Imaging Core (RRID:SCR_015607) Copy
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