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The Human Cell Atlas White Paper

Authors :
Regev, Aviv
Teichmann, Sarah
Rozenblatt-Rosen, Orit
Stubbington, Michael
Ardlie, Kristin
Amit, Ido
Arlotta, Paola
Bader, Gary
Benoist, Christophe
Biton, Moshe
Bodenmiller, Bernd
Bruneau, Benoit
Campbell, Peter
Carmichael, Mary
Carninci, Piero
Castelo-Soccio, Leslie
Clatworthy, Menna
Clevers, Hans
Conrad, Christian
Eils, Roland
Freeman, Jeremy
Fugger, Lars
Goettgens, Berthold
Graham, Daniel
Greka, Anna
Hacohen, Nir
Haniffa, Muzlifah
Helbig, Ingo
Heuckeroth, Robert
Kathiresan, Sekar
Kim, Seung
Klein, Allon
Knoppers, Bartha
Kriegstein, Arnold
Lander, Eric
Lee, Jane
Lein, Ed
Linnarsson, Sten
Macosko, Evan
MacParland, Sonya
Majovski, Robert
Majumder, Partha
Marioni, John
McGilvray, Ian
Merad, Miriam
Mhlanga, Musa
Naik, Shalin
Nawijn, Martijn
Nolan, Garry
Paten, Benedict
Pe'er, Dana
Philippakis, Anthony
Ponting, Chris
Quake, Steve
Rajagopal, Jayaraj
Rajewsky, Nikolaus
Reik, Wolf
Rood, Jennifer
Saeb-Parsy, Kourosh
Schiller, Herbert
Scott, Steve
Shalek, Alex
Shapiro, Ehud
Shin, Jay
Skeldon, Kenneth
Stratton, Michael
Streicher, Jenna
Stunnenberg, Henk
Tan, Kai
Taylor, Deanne
Thorogood, Adrian
Vallier, Ludovic
van Oudenaarden, Alexander
Watt, Fiona
Weicher, Wilko
Weissman, Jonathan
Wells, Andrew
Wold, Barbara
Xavier, Ramnik
Zhuang, Xiaowei
Committee, Human Cell Atlas Organizing
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

The Human Cell Atlas (HCA) will be made up of comprehensive reference maps of all human cells - the fundamental units of life - as a basis for understanding fundamental human biological processes and diagnosing, monitoring, and treating disease. It will help scientists understand how genetic variants impact disease risk, define drug toxicities, discover better therapies, and advance regenerative medicine. A resource of such ambition and scale should be built in stages, increasing in size, breadth, and resolution as technologies develop and understanding deepens. We will therefore pursue Phase 1 as a suite of flagship projects in key tissues, systems, and organs. We will bring together experts in biology, medicine, genomics, technology development and computation (including data analysis, software engineering, and visualization). We will also need standardized experimental and computational methods that will allow us to compare diverse cell and tissue types - and samples across human communities - in consistent ways, ensuring that the resulting resource is truly global. This document, the first version of the HCA White Paper, was written by experts in the field with feedback and suggestions from the HCA community, gathered during recent international meetings. The White Paper, released at the close of this yearlong planning process, will be a living document that evolves as the HCA community provides additional feedback, as technological and computational advances are made, and as lessons are learned during the construction of the atlas.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1810.05192
Document Type :
Working Paper