The Human Cell Atlas selected as one of 10 emerging technologies to make a change to society


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This week, Scientific American announced ten emerging technologies with innovations that are on the verge of changing society. One of the technologies selected was the Human Cell Atlas, which aims to integrate research exploring the building-blocks of human cells using new emerging technologies. The list of ten emerging technologies was compiled in a collaboration between Scientific American and the World Economic Forum's Expert Network with suggestions from members of the Expert Network, the forum's Global Future Councils and Scientific American's board of advisers. Then the group whittled down the choices by focusing on technologies showing signs of being ready to move to the next level with significant benefits to societies and economies.

One of the ten emerging technologies selected was the Human Cell Atlas, which aims to integrate research exploring all the ”omes” the genome (the full set of genes), the transcriptome (the RNA made from all genes), the proteome (the proteins), the metabolome (small molecules, such as sugars, fatty acids and amino acids, involved or generated by cellular processes), and the fluxome (metabolic reactions whose rates can vary under different conditions). The project, has been made technically feasible by an array of technological achievements for profiling single human cells at any given time. The integrated results will lead to a tool that will simulate all the types and states of cells in our body and provide new understandings of disease processes. In a recent meeting (May 2017) in Stockholm, the Facebook related Chan Zuckerberg Initiative announced that they will fund financial and engineering support to build an open data-coordination platform to organize the results and to make the data sharable by researchers in the project and beyond.

As noted by the article in Scientific American, one of the most advanced projects underlying the Human Cell Atlas is the Human Protein Atlas (www.proteinatlas.org), involving researchers from multiple countries, including Sweden, Denmark, South Korea, China and India. Participants in the Human Protein Atlas have classified a large majority of the human protein-coding genes with the ultimate aim to provide a spatial map of human proteins using a combination of genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics and antibody-based profiling. Since the program's inception in 2003, approximately 100 person-years of software development have gone into keeping track of the data and organizing them for systems-level analyses. More than 10 million images have been generated and annotated by certified pathologists analyzing the expression of each protein in 76 different cell types (Uhlen et al, Science 2015). The Human Protein Atlas also includes a high-resolution map of the locations of more than 12,000 proteins in 30 subcellular compartments, or organelles, of various cells (Thul et al, Science, 2017). All the findings are available to the research community with no restriction and users can query the database to explore the proteins in any major organ or tissue, or they can focus on proteins with specific properties (such as those that participate in basic cell maintenance or that occur only in specific tissues).

”We are excited about the efforts to create a Human Cell Atlas and the addition of new emerging tools to create a knowledge-based platform for understanding the human cell ” says Mathias Uhlen, Director of the international Human Protein Atlas consortium. ”Completing the Human Cell Atlas is a mammoth task that needs the participation of many international collaborations and the combined knowledge-base will be an immeasurably valuable tool to model the plethora of dynamic components that enable life and to create a resource that can be used to explore new ideas for therapies and diagnostics in the near future”.

Read the article in Scientific American and the press release on our website.


Mathias Uhlén