NNI nanoinformatics conference 2023: Movement toward a common infrastructure for federal nanoEHS data computational toxicology: Short communication

Holly M. Mortensen*, Jaleesia D. Amos, Thomas E. Exner, Kenneth Flores, Stacey Harper, Annie M. Jarabek, Fred Klaessig, Vladimir Lobaskin, Iseult Lynch, Christopher S. Marcum, Marvin Martens, Branden Brough, Quinn Spadola, Rhema Bjorkland

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalLetterpeer-review

Abstract

The National Nanotechnology Initiative organized a Nanoinformatics Conference in the 2023 Biden-Harris Administration's Year of Open Science, which included interested U.S. and EU stakeholders, and preceded the U.S.-EU COR meeting on November 15th, 2023 in Washington, D.C. Progress in the development of a common nanoinformatics infrastructure in the European Union and United States were discussed. Development of contributing, individual database projects, and their strengths and weaknesses, were highlighted. Recommendations and next steps for a U.S. nanoEHS common infrastructure were discussed in light of the pending update of the National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI)’s Environmental, Health and Safety Research Strategy, and U.S. efforts to curate and house nano Environmental Health and Safety (nanoEHS) data from U.S. federal stakeholder groups. Improved data standards, for reporting and storage have been identified as areas where concerted efforts could most benefit initially. Areas that were not addressed at the conference, but that are critical to progress of the U.S. federal consortium effort are the evaluation of data formats according to use and sustainability measures; modeler and end user, including risk-assessor and regulator perspectives; a need for a community forum or shared data location that is not hosted by any individual U.S. federal agency, and is accessible to the public; as well as emerging needs for integration with new data types such as micro and nano plastics, and interoperability with other data and meta-data, such as adverse outcome pathway information. Future progress will depend on continued interaction of the U.S. and EU CORs, stakeholders and partners in the continued development goals for shared or interoperable infrastructure for nanoEHS.

Original languageEnglish
Article number100316
JournalComputational Toxicology
Volume30
Early online date16 May 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2024

Bibliographical note

The authors would like to acknowledge the NNI NEHI DIIG partners, and federal organizing committee members, specifically Keana Scott (NIST), Treye Thomas (CPSC), Jay Vietas (NIOSH), Anil Patri (FDA), Natalia Garcia Reyero Vinas (DOD OSD), Kanakadudurga Addepalli (NIH), Charles Schmitt (NIH), Nora Savage NSF), and Luisa Russell (NIH) for their participation and organization of the event. The authors would also like to thank Geoff Holdridge (contractor NNCO) and Mark Weisner (Duke University) as well as U.S. and EU participants for their contributed views and discussion that ultimately led to the opinions and goals set out in the current manuscript, as well as Adam Biales and Michael F. Hughes of the EPA, and reviewers in the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP), for their careful review and comments on the manuscript. These proceedings are a product of contributions from federal and non-federal authors. As such, views expressed by non-federal participants do not represent views or policies of federal agencies.

Keywords

  • Database
  • Emerging materials
  • FAIR
  • Infrastructure
  • Interoperability
  • Nanomaterials
  • Safe/sustainable by design

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Toxicology
  • Computer Science Applications
  • Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis

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