Human Health Exposure Analysis Resource Core: Untargeted Analysis
Project Number5U2CES030857-03
Contact PI/Project LeaderFENNELL, TIMOTHY RAYMOND Other PIs
Awardee OrganizationRESEARCH TRIANGLE INSTITUTE
Description
Abstract Text
Project Summary/Abstract (Overall)
Exposures to environmentally relevant chemicals, drugs, medications, and the ingestion of nutrients, and
how they perturb endogenous metabolism have been linked with many types of adverse health outcomes.
Our Hub has the resources, skilled staff, and knowledge to immediately provide Exposome services to
clients of the Human Health Exposure Analysis Resource (HHEAR) Program (RFA-ES-18-012). We initiated
our Untargeted Analysis Core in 2012 through a grant from the NIH Common Fund (C-F) Metabolomics
Program, and have established and applied metabolomics methods to hundreds of studies with over 30
organizations across the United States. These studies have included analysis of a wide range of
biospecimens (e.g., urine, serum, plasma, sweat, feces) with anchors to numerous types of health outcomes
in studies of maternal and child health, kidney disease, cardiovascular disease, obesity and diabetes, and
response to treatment. The success of the NIH C-F Eastern Regional Comprehensive Metabolomics
Resource Core (ERCMRC) led to our establishing a Children's Health Exposure Analysis Resource
(CHEAR) Hub as part of the NIEHS CHEAR Program. Under the CHEAR Program, we successfully
executed our goals, which included a) expanding our services to include high-throughput analysis of the
Exposome using high-resolution Orbitrap mass spectrometry, b) establishing an extensive in-house physical
standards library of exogenous and endogenous compounds run on the untargeted platform, and c)
participating in cross laboratory comparisons to reveal the range of environmentally relevant analytes
identified on our untargeted platform. Our untargeted methods result in tens of thousands of signals that are
annotated by matching to public databases, and annotated and identified against our in-house physical
standards library, using Big Data Analytics. Our core led the development of an evidence-based Ontology
System for the CHEAR Program, which ensures that the confidence in annotations and assignments will be
clearly communicated between Hubs. We have in place over 100 fine-tuned protocols that span the workflow
from receipt of samples through reporting data, and that have quality control/assurance procedures in place
for all steps of the workflow. The HHEAR Untargeted Hub will work within the HHEAR Network and other
HHEAR Hubs, the HHEAR Data Analysis Center (DAC), and the HHEAR Coordinating Center (CC) to
provide client services for Untargeted Analysis, and to work across the consortium to harmonize and
integrate results. The HHEAR Hub will be led under a Multiple PI Leadership Plan by Dr. Timothy Fennell
(Director, Administrative Core and the Development Core), Dr. SusanSumner (Director, Untargeted Analysis
Resource), and Dr. Xiuxia Du (leader, Computational Exposome workflow). We are ready to provide
untargeted analysis for epidemiology investigations using a wide range of biospecimens and state-of-the-art
technologies, and analysis approaches to reveal the influence of the environment on disease.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Project Narrative
The Human Health Exposure Analysis Resource (HHEAR) Hub will use existing resources and infrastructure
developed under the NIH Common Fund Metabolomics Program and the NIEHS-Children’s Health Exposure
Analysis Resource (CHEAR) Program to facilitate exposome research, and we will expand our methods for
identification of even more compounds that comprise the exposome. Deriving links between environmental
exposures and biological responses in humans through understanding metabolic perturbations is critical to the
development of intervention strategies.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
AcetaminophenAminesAmino AcidsAromatic Polycyclic HydrocarbonsBig Data MethodsBiologicalCarboxylic AcidsCardiovascular DiseasesChemicalsChild HealthClientCommunicationCoupledDataData AnalysesData ReportingDatabasesDetectionDevelopmentDiabetes MellitusDiseaseEnsureEnvironmentEnvironmental ExposureEnvironmental HealthEpidemiologyExposure toFatty AcidsFecesFoodFundingGas ChromatographyGoalsGrantHealthHeroinHumanInfrastructureIngestionInterventionInvestigationKidney DiseasesKnowledgeLaboratoriesLeadershipLibrariesLinkLiquid ChromatographyLysophospholipidsMass Spectrum AnalysisMaternal and Child HealthMeasuresMetabolicMetabolismMetforminMethodsModelingMorphineNational Institute of Environmental Health SciencesNuclear Magnetic ResonanceNucleosidesNutrientObesityOntologyOpioidOutcomeParabensPesticidesPharmaceutical PreparationsPhenolsPhenotypePlasmaProceduresProcessProtocols documentationPublicationsQuality ControlReportingReproducibilityResearchResolutionResourcesRunningSamplingSerumServicesSignal TransductionSystemTechnologyTimeTranslatingUnited StatesUnited States National Institutes of HealthUrineWorkacylcarnitinecase controlcohortcomparativedata resourcedrug of abuseevidence baseexperiencehigh throughput analysisimprovedinorganic phosphateion mobilitylipidomicsmetabolic phenotypemetabolomicsmetabolomics resourcemultiple reaction monitoringoutreachphthalatespolyphenolprogramsquality assuranceresponsesample collectionsuccesssugartherapy developmenttime of flight mass spectrometrytobacco productstreatment responsevolatile organic compound
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
CFDA Code
113
DUNS Number
004868105
UEI
JJHCMK4NT5N3
Project Start Date
05-September-2019
Project End Date
31-May-2026
Budget Start Date
01-June-2021
Budget End Date
31-May-2024
Project Funding Information for 2021
Total Funding
$1,700,000
Direct Costs
$4,062,310
Indirect Costs
$843,329
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
2021
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
$1,200,000
2021
NIH Office of the Director
$500,000
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
Sub Projects
No Sub Projects information available for 5U2CES030857-03
Publications
Publications are associated with projects, but cannot be identified with any particular year of the project or fiscal year of funding. This is due to the continuous and cumulative nature of knowledge generation across the life of a project and the sometimes long and variable publishing timeline. Similarly, for multi-component projects, publications are associated with the parent core project and not with individual sub-projects.
No Publications available for 5U2CES030857-03
Patents
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Outcomes
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No Outcomes available for 5U2CES030857-03
Clinical Studies
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History
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