Time to Move Onстатья из журнала
Аннотация: In 1996, we began publishing in Obesity Research a review of the status of the human obesity gene map (1). Since then, 10 updates of the map have been published, the latest in 2006 covering the literature available as of the end of October 2005 (2). In 1999, an electronic version of the map was made available on the website of the Donald B. Brown Chair on Obesity at Université Laval in Quebec City, Canada. Later, in 2002, the web-based version of the map was migrated to the Human Genomics Laboratory web site at the Pennington Biomedical Research Center in Baton Rouge, LA, where I had moved. While the print version of the map continued to be a factual summary of the material published at a particular point in time, the web-based version (Obesity Gene Map Database or OGMDB) was enriched considerably and provided extensive linkages to other relevant resources. The printed version in Obesity (previously, Obesity Research) was well received by the scientific community, as evidenced by its relatively high rate of citation over the last 10 years (∼750 citations by the end of 2006). Similarly, the OGMDB resource enjoyed ∼15,000 hits per month in the last few years, with thousands of regular visitors. Interestingly, the most assiduous users were from the pharmaceutical industry and from biotechnology companies. Developing the yearly update of the map became progressively a major burden. For instance, the last rendition published in Obesity in 2006 reached a total of 116 journal pages. It had become an effort of a magnitude that could not be sustained without the addition of human resources dedicated solely to the project. Despite our best efforts, funds could not be raised in a timely fashion to make it possible for us to continue publishing these yearly updates. Fortunately, a joint effort by the National Institute on Aging at NIH and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will compensate in part for the termination of the human obesity gene map publication project and OGMDB. Indeed, these two entities have launched and are maintaining a database of human genetic association studies. The database can be accessed at http:geneticassociationdb.nih.gov. Obesity is not the main focus of the database, but it is included, along with many other diseases and conditions. While the human obesity gene map covered much more than association studies (i.e., Mendelian syndromes, human and animal model single gene defects, genomic scans performed in human cohorts and in animal models, transgenic and knockout murine data, etc.), the new NIH-CDC database focuses on one of the most critical lines of evidence to consider in assessing the role of gene polymorphisms. So it seems like a good time to move on. The field should continue to be well served by the new resource. The map project was made possible through the dedication and hard work of several colleagues at Université Laval and at the Pennington Biomedical Research Center. Even though I will not be able to thank them all here, I would like to express my gratitude to the very early collaborators, Drs. Louis Perusse and Yvon C. Chagnon, as well as John Weisnagel and Tuomo Rankinen, who joined the team soon thereafter. Thanks are also due to Drs. Eric E. Snyder, George Argyropoulos, and Aamir Zuberi, who brought additional expertise to the team in the later years. We were well supported by Diane Drolet in the early phase at Université Laval and, subsequently, by Brandon M. Walts and Nina Laidlaw at the Pennington Biomedical Research Center. I am also grateful for the contribution of the Donald B. Brown Chair on Obesity in the first few years of the project and of several units of the Pennington Biomedical Research Center in more recent times. Finally, I would like to thank the Editors of Obesity (Drs. Xavier Pi-Sunyer and, later, Barbara Corkey) and the Managing Editor, Deborah K. Moskowitz, for their encouragement and strong support for the publication of the annual update of the human obesity gene map over the last 10 years.
Год издания: 2007
Авторы: Claude Bouchard
Издательство: Wiley
Источник: Obesity
Ключевые слова: Nutrition, Genetics, and Disease, Adipose Tissue and Metabolism, Genetic Associations and Epidemiology
Открытый доступ: bronze
Том: 15
Выпуск: 4
Страницы: 797–797