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Image-based profiling highlighted in NRDD review article

Several Consortium members collaborated to write a review article highlighting applications of image-based profiling in the pharmaceutical pipeline, published today in Nature Reviews Drug Discovery. The article, "Image-based profiling for drug discovery: due for a machine-learning upgrade?", can be...

Nomic to Provide nELISA to JUMP Cell Painting Consortium

Protein profiling company Nomic announced in a press release today that it is providing access to the company’s nELISA TM platform to the Joint Undertaking in Morphological Profiling-Cell Painting (JUMP-CP) consortium. With this access, Nomic joins the JUMP-CP consortium as a Supporting Partner...

'Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News' Features JUMP-Cell Painting

Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News today featured Dr. Anne Carpenter and her group at the Broad Institute for their work launching a Cell Imaging Consortium. The consortium includes 12 pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies and received funding through the Massachusetts Life Sciences...

'Nature Reviews Drug Discovery' news article on Cell Painting

The JUMP-Cell Painting Consortium is alluded to in the Nature Reviews Drug Discovery news item, " Machine learning brings cell imaging promises into focus". The article overviews the entire field of image-based profiling and phenotype discovery, including industry and academic developments.

Two publicly available portals to explore the data

Ardigen’s phenAID portal The phenAID JUMP-CP Explorer was created by the Ardigen Data Science and Software Development team to enable easy access and visualization of JUMP-CP data. The web-based application shows a phenotypic and structural representation of the data set colored by clusters. Users...

Data release & Manuscript in BioRxiv

We are excited to share that the JUMP Cell Painting Datasets now include most data components from all but one of the sources for the principal dataset (cpg0016), covering 116,000 chemical and over 20,000 genetic perturbations (covering ~15,000 genes). The first draft of metadata files are available...