Award details

The human serum metabolome in health and disease

ReferenceBB/C519003/1
Principal Investigator / Supervisor Dr Nitin Purandare
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Professor Alistair Burns
Institution The University of Manchester
DepartmentMedical and Human Sciences
Funding typeResearch
Value (£) 197,915
StatusCompleted
TypeResearch Grant
Start date 01/10/2005
End date 31/03/2009
Duration42 months

Abstract

Many arguments, including those based on metabolic Control Analysis (MCA), indicate that the metabolome should be a particularly high-resolution method for amplifying and thereby reflecting changes in the levels of gene products, especially those which accompany disease pathogenesis. A key imperative is therefore to develop and industrialise the technology optimal for determining the serum metabolome reliably, to establish the disease-independent ranges of the many hundreds of metabolites that can be observed with such technology, to recognise the disease-independent changes that occur `simply as a function of diet, gender, age, therapeutic interventions and lifestyle, and to make these data for `normals available in a web-accessible manner. Such data will form the reference baseline that will allow prognostic and diagnostic biomarkers for disease progression to be identified reliably; this will show the high- resolution discrimination possible with metabolomic data for both diagnosis and treatment. In parallel, we shall contribute to the development of (i) robust data models for metabolome data, and (ii) machine learning methods of classification in which the `gold standard diagnosis may be imperfectly reliable. The deliverables will be both underpinning knowledge of the human serum metabolome (probably including the discovery of many novel metabolites) and the identification of candidate biomarkers for two diseases.

Summary

unavailable
Committee Closed Committee - Genes & Developmental Biology (GDB)
Research TopicsPharmaceuticals, Technology and Methods Development
Research PriorityX – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative LINK: Applied Genomics (APG) [2000-2004]
Funding SchemeX – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
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