Project description:Healthy Start is a prospective, pre-birth cohort study that recruited pregnant participants from outpatient prenatal clinics at the University of Colorado Hospital between 2009 and 2014. Eligible participants were 16 years or older with singleton pregnancies, no history of stillbirth or extremely preterm birth (<25 weeks of gestation) and no serious medical conditions, and had not yet completed 24 weeks of gestation at the time of enrollment. Mothers completed two study visits during pregnancy (median gestational ages 17 and 27 weeks). Mother-child pairs were thereafter assessed at birth, and for the child’s follow up, in mid-childhood (median age 4.8 years). For the present project, we will use data from 523 mother-child pairs of the Healthy Start cohort with available information on prenatal PFAS concentrations, available cord plasma samples at delivery, and outcomes of interest. Please contact Wei Perng at wei.perng@cuanschutz.edu for questions related to the subject characteristics and outcomes. This research was supported by the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) program, Office of The Director, National Institutes of Health. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health. Healthy Start is an ECHO cohort which is supported by the following ECHO Program Collaborators: ECHO Coordinating Center: Duke Clinical Research Institute, Durham, North Carolina: Smith PB, Newby KL, Benjamin DK; U2C OD023375 ECHO Data Analysis Center: Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland: Jacobson LP; Research Triangle Institute, Durham, North Carolina: Parker CB; U24 OD023382 North Carolina Human Health Exposure Analysis Resource Hub: Research Triangle Institute: Fennell T, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: Sumner S, University of North Carolina at Charlotte: Du X; U2C ES030857 Human Health Exposure Analysis Resource Coordinating Center: Westat, Inc., Rockville, Maryland: O’Brien B; U24 ES026539
Project description:Gene expression changes in the blood was studied by RNAseq Results: Strong differential host reponse after infection with influenza virus compared to healthy controls project SIG_2020
Project description:In the context of the Human Cell Atlas, the ImmGen consortium generated reference profiles by bulk RNAseq on finely sorted populations of immunocytes from human blood, healthy volunteers.
Project description:Gene expression changes in the blood was studied by RNAseq; project SIG-2019 Results: Strong differential host reponse after infection with influenza virus compared to healthy controls
Project description:RNAseq was used to map transcription start sites globally in wild type Escherichia coli. Total RNA was isolated from cells grown in LB media until exponential phase.
Project description:Gene expression changes in the blood was studied by RNAseq; project SIG-2018 Results: Strong differential host reponse after infection with influenza virus compared to healthy controls