Space omics research in Europe: Contributions, geographical distribution and ESA member state funding schemes
Space omics research in Europe: Contributions, geographical distribution and ESA member state funding schemes
The European research community, via European Space Agency (ESA) spaceflight opportunities, has significantly contributed toward our current understanding of spaceflight biology. Recent molecular biology experiments include "omic" analysis, which provides a holistic and systems level understanding of the mechanisms underlying phenotypic adaptation. Despite vast interest in, and the immense quantity of biological information gained from space omics research, the knowledge of ESA-related space omics works as a collective remains poorly defined due to the recent exponential application of omics approaches in space and the limited search capabilities of pre-existing records. Thus, a review of such contributions is necessary to clarify and promote the development of space omics among ESA and ESA state members. To address this gap, in this review, we i) identified and summarized omics works led by European researchers, ii) geographically described these omics works, and iii) highlighted potential caveats in complex funding scenarios among ESA member states.
Deane, Colleen S.
3320532e-f411-4ea8-9a14-4a9f248da898
da Siveira, Willian A.
533dfb07-320e-44a7-94bf-b90af0acccb8
Herranz, Raul
ec7f0257-2218-42e6-9ce8-dcb48f0d23c0
12 March 2022
Deane, Colleen S.
3320532e-f411-4ea8-9a14-4a9f248da898
da Siveira, Willian A.
533dfb07-320e-44a7-94bf-b90af0acccb8
Herranz, Raul
ec7f0257-2218-42e6-9ce8-dcb48f0d23c0
Deane, Colleen S., da Siveira, Willian A. and Herranz, Raul
,
Space Omics Topical Team
(2022)
Space omics research in Europe: Contributions, geographical distribution and ESA member state funding schemes.
iScience, 25 (3).
(doi:10.1016/j.isci.2022.103920).
Abstract
The European research community, via European Space Agency (ESA) spaceflight opportunities, has significantly contributed toward our current understanding of spaceflight biology. Recent molecular biology experiments include "omic" analysis, which provides a holistic and systems level understanding of the mechanisms underlying phenotypic adaptation. Despite vast interest in, and the immense quantity of biological information gained from space omics research, the knowledge of ESA-related space omics works as a collective remains poorly defined due to the recent exponential application of omics approaches in space and the limited search capabilities of pre-existing records. Thus, a review of such contributions is necessary to clarify and promote the development of space omics among ESA and ESA state members. To address this gap, in this review, we i) identified and summarized omics works led by European researchers, ii) geographically described these omics works, and iii) highlighted potential caveats in complex funding scenarios among ESA member states.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 15 February 2022
Published date: 12 March 2022
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Local EPrints ID: 477947
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/477947
ISSN: 2589-0042
PURE UUID: b74f9c91-6cce-4b9c-96ec-dcb11a844543
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Date deposited: 16 Jun 2023 16:52
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:15
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Author:
Colleen S. Deane
Author:
Willian A. da Siveira
Author:
Raul Herranz
Corporate Author: Space Omics Topical Team
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