List of Studies ( Metabolite:Glu-Ser-Val)
Study_id | Analysis_id | Study_title | Source | Species | Disease | Institute | Units(range) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ST002010 | AN003276 | Chemoresistant Ovarian Cancer Global Metabolomics | Cultured cells | Human | Cancer | The University of South Australia | Intensity |
ST002104 | AN003439 | Chemoresistant Cancer Cell Lines are Characterized by Migratory, Amino Acid Metabolism, Protein Catabolism and IFN1 Signalling Perturbations | Cultured cells | Human | Cancer | Future Industries Institute | peak height |
ST002792 | AN004543 | Chemoproteomics validates selective targeting of Plasmodium M1 alanyl aminopeptidase as a cross-species strategy to treat malaria | Blood | Plasmodium falciparum | Malaria | Monash University | peak height |
ST002926 | AN004799 | Multi-“omics” analysis reveals the orphan P. falciparum protein kinase PfPK8 regulates multi-gene family expression | Blood | Plasmodium falciparum | Malaria | Monash University | peak height |
ST003024 | AN004959 | Identifying and mathematically modeling the time-course of extracellular metabolic markers associated with resistance to ceftolozane/tazobactam in Pseudomonas aeruginosa - Part 1 | Bacterial cells | Bacteria | Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences | peak height | |
ST003036 | AN004977 | Identifying and mathematically modeling the time-course of extracellular metabolic markers associated with resistance to ceftolozane/tazobactam in Pseudomonas aeruginosa - Part 2 | Bacterial cells | Pseudomonas aeruginosa | Bacterial infection | Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences | peak height |
ST003053 | AN005007 | Providing insight into the mechanism of action of Cationic Lipidated Oligomers (CLOs) using metabolomics | Bacterial cells | Staphylococcus aureus | Bacterial infection | Monash University | peak height |
ST003144 | AN005160 | On-target, dual aminopeptidase inhibition provides cross-species antimalarial activity | Blood | Plasmodium falciparum | Malaria | Monash University | peak height |
ST003521 | AN005782 | Metabolic Profiling Unveils Enhanced Antibacterial Synergy of Polymyxin B and Teixobactin against Multi-Drug Resistant Acinetobacter baumannii | Bacterial cells | Acinetobacter baumannii | Bacterial infection | Monash University | peak height |
ST000546 | AN000832 | Multi-omics based identification of specific biochemical changes associated with PfKelch13-mutant artemisinin resistant Plasmodium | Cells | Plasmodium falciparum | Malaria | Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Monash University | Peak height |
ST001201 | AN001998 | Peroxide antimalarial treatment timecourse on trophozoite-stage P. falciparum parasites | Cultured cells | Human | Malaria | Monash University | Peak intensity |
ST001201 | AN001998 | Peroxide antimalarial treatment timecourse on trophozoite-stage P. falciparum parasites | Cultured cells | Plasmodium falciparum | Malaria | Monash University | Peak intensity |
ST001205 | AN002007 | Peroxide antimalarial treatment of K13-mutant and -wildtype P. falciparum parasites | Cultured cells | Human | Malaria | Monash University | Peak intensity |
ST001205 | AN002007 | Peroxide antimalarial treatment of K13-mutant and -wildtype P. falciparum parasites | Cultured cells | Plasmodium falciparum | Malaria | Monash University | Peak intensity |
ST002106 | AN003445 | Genetic and chemical validation of Plasmodium falciparum aminopeptidase PfA-M17 as a drug target in the hemoglobin digestion pathway (Part 1) | Blood | Plasmodium falciparum | Malaria | Monash University | relative intensity |
ST002107 | AN003447 | Genetic and chemical validation of Plasmodium falciparum aminopeptidase PfA-M17 as a drug target in the hemoglobin digestion pathway (Part 2) | Blood | Plasmodium falciparum | Malaria | Monash University | relative intensity |
ST002108 | AN003448 | Genetic and chemical validation of Plasmodium falciparum aminopeptidase PfA-M17 as a drug target in the hemoglobin digestion pathway (Part 3) | Blood | Plasmodium falciparum | Malaria | Monash University | relative intensity |