TY - JOUR
T1 - Minimal information for chemosensitivity assays (MICHA)
T2 - a next-generation pipeline to enable the FAIRification of drug screening experiments
AU - Tanoli, Ziaurrehman
AU - Aldahdooh, Jehad
AU - Alam, Farhan
AU - Wang, Yinyin
AU - Seemab, Umair
AU - Fratelli, Maddalena
AU - Pavlis, Petr
AU - Hajduch, Marian
AU - Bietrix, Florence
AU - Gribbon, Philip
AU - Zaliani, Andrea
AU - Hall, Matthew D.
AU - Shen, Min
AU - Brimacombe, Kyle
AU - Kulesskiy, Evgeny
AU - Saarela, Jani
AU - Wennerberg, Krister
AU - Vähä-Koskela, Markus
AU - Tang, Jing
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Chemosensitivity assays are commonly used for preclinical drug discovery and clinical trial optimization. However, data from independent assays are often discordant, largely attributed to uncharacterized variation in the experimental materials and protocols. We report here the launching of Minimal Information for Chemosensitivity Assays (MICHA), accessed via https://micha-protocol.org. Distinguished from existing efforts that are often lacking support from data integration tools, MICHA can automatically extract publicly available information to facilitate the assay annotation including: 1) compounds, 2) samples, 3) reagents and 4) data processing methods. For example, MICHA provides an integrative web server and database to obtain compound annotation including chemical structures, targets and disease indications. In addition, the annotation of cell line samples, assay protocols and literature references can be greatly eased by retrieving manually curated catalogues. Once the annotation is complete, MICHA can export a report that conforms to the FAIR principle (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable) of drug screening studies. To consolidate the utility of MICHA, we provide FAIRified protocols from five major cancer drug screening studies as well as six recently conducted COVID-19 studies. With the MICHA web server and database, we envisage a wider adoption of a community-driven effort to improve the open access of drug sensitivity assays.
AB - Chemosensitivity assays are commonly used for preclinical drug discovery and clinical trial optimization. However, data from independent assays are often discordant, largely attributed to uncharacterized variation in the experimental materials and protocols. We report here the launching of Minimal Information for Chemosensitivity Assays (MICHA), accessed via https://micha-protocol.org. Distinguished from existing efforts that are often lacking support from data integration tools, MICHA can automatically extract publicly available information to facilitate the assay annotation including: 1) compounds, 2) samples, 3) reagents and 4) data processing methods. For example, MICHA provides an integrative web server and database to obtain compound annotation including chemical structures, targets and disease indications. In addition, the annotation of cell line samples, assay protocols and literature references can be greatly eased by retrieving manually curated catalogues. Once the annotation is complete, MICHA can export a report that conforms to the FAIR principle (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable) of drug screening studies. To consolidate the utility of MICHA, we provide FAIRified protocols from five major cancer drug screening studies as well as six recently conducted COVID-19 studies. With the MICHA web server and database, we envisage a wider adoption of a community-driven effort to improve the open access of drug sensitivity assays.
KW - data integration tools
KW - drug discovery
KW - drug sensitivity assays
KW - FAIR research data
U2 - 10.1093/bib/bbab350
DO - 10.1093/bib/bbab350
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 34472587
AN - SCOPUS:85123814352
SN - 1467-5463
VL - 23
JO - Briefings in Bioinformatics
JF - Briefings in Bioinformatics
IS - 1
ER -