Propelling the paradigm shift from reductionism to systems nutrition
Autor: | Jim Kaput, Giuditta Perozzi, Fabio Virgili, Marijana Radonjic |
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Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Reductionism medicine.medical_specialty Standardization Computer science Systems biology Clinical study design Best practice Endocrinology Diabetes and Metabolism Human genetic variation Bioinformatics Data science Women’s health 03 medical and health sciences 030104 developmental biology Editorial Paradigm shift Data standards Guidelines for biomedical research medicine Genetics Systems nutrition Preventive healthcare |
Zdroj: | Genes & Nutrition |
ISSN: | 1555-8932 |
Popis: | The complex physiology of living organisms represents a challenge for mechanistic understanding of the action of dietary bioactives in the human body and of their possible role in health and disease. Animal, cell, and microbial models have been extensively used to address questions that could not be pursued experimentally in humans, posing an additional level of complexity in translation of the results to healthy and diseased metabolism. The past few decades have witnessed a surge in development of increasingly sensitive molecular techniques and bioinformatic tools for storing, managing, and analyzing increasingly large datasets. Application of such powerful means to molecular nutrition research led to a major leap in study designs and experimental approaches yielding experimental data connecting dietary components to human health. Scientific journals bear major responsibilities in the advancement of science. As primary actors of dissemination to the scientific community, journals can impose rigid criteria for publishing only sound, reliable, and reproducible data. Journal policies are meant to guide potential authors to adopt the most updated standardization guidelines and shared best practices. Such policies evolve in parallel with the evolution of novel approaches and emerging challenges and therefore require constant updating. We highlight in this manuscript the major scientific issues that led to formulating new, updated journal policies for Genes & Nutrition, a journal which targets the growing field of nutritional systems biology interfacing personalized nutrition and preventive medicine, with the ultimate goal of promoting health and preventing or treating disease. We focus here on relevant issues requiring standardization in nutrition research. We also introduce new sections on human genetic variation and nutritional bioinformatics which follow the evolution of nutritional science into the twenty-first century. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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