LungMAP: The molecular atlas of lung development program

Ardini-Poleske, ME; Clark, RF; Ansong, C; Carson, JP; Corley, RA; Deutsch, GH; Hagood, JS; Kaminski, N; Mariani, TJ; Potter, SS; Pryhuber, GS; Warburton, D; Whitsett, JA; Palmer, SM; Ambalavanan, N; LungMAP Consortium

HERO ID

6571289

Reference Type

Journal Article

Subtype

Review

Year

2017

Language

English

PMID

28798251

HERO ID 6571289
Material Type Review
In Press No
Year 2017
Title LungMAP: The molecular atlas of lung development program
Authors Ardini-Poleske, ME; Clark, RF; Ansong, C; Carson, JP; Corley, RA; Deutsch, GH; Hagood, JS; Kaminski, N; Mariani, TJ; Potter, SS; Pryhuber, GS; Warburton, D; Whitsett, JA; Palmer, SM; Ambalavanan, N; LungMAP Consortium
Journal American Journal of Physiology: Lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology
Volume 313
Issue 5
Page Numbers L733-L740
Abstract The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute is funding an effort to create a molecular atlas of the developing lung (LungMAP) to serve as a research resource and public education tool. The lung is a complex organ with lengthy development time driven by interactive gene networks and dynamic cross talk among multiple cell types to control and coordinate lineage specification, cell proliferation, differentiation, migration, morphogenesis, and injury repair. A better understanding of the processes that regulate lung development, particularly alveologenesis, will have a significant impact on survival rates for premature infants born with incomplete lung development and will facilitate lung injury repair and regeneration in adults. A consortium of four research centers, a data coordinating center, and a human tissue repository provides high-quality molecular data of developing human and mouse lungs. LungMAP includes mouse and human data for cross correlation of developmental processes across species. LungMAP is generating foundational data and analysis, creating a web portal for presentation of results and public sharing of data sets, establishing a repository of young human lung tissues obtained through organ donor organizations, and developing a comprehensive lung ontology that incorporates the latest findings of the consortium. The LungMAP website (www.lungmap.net) currently contains more than 6,000 high-resolution lung images and transcriptomic, proteomic, and lipidomic human and mouse data and provides scientific information to stimulate interest in research careers for young audiences. This paper presents a brief description of research conducted by the consortium, database, and portal development and upcoming features that will enhance the LungMAP experience for a community of users.
Doi 10.1152/ajplung.00139.2017
Pmid 28798251
Wosid WOS:000416415300001
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword lung development; web resource; lung imaging; lung omics; 3D imaging; single cell analysis