Register by Midnight PDT September 30, 2021

The D-Challenge is a global focused scientific movement that begins with the end in mind. We are leveraging our connections with Type 1 Diabetes researchers around the world and inviting ALL of them to compete to catalyze innovation and accelerate research towards a practical cure for Type 1 Diabetes.  In doing so, we aim to add a solid appreciation of the biology that drives this relentless disease to the current literature and knowledge base.

Type 1 Diabetes is a multifactorial disease that is studied by many scientific disciplines. thesugarscience, is partnering with dkNET (the NIDDK Information Network) to bring the full power of on-line digital resources to the challenge of Type 1 Diabetes.  We are inviting you to participate in the D-Challenge, a bio-informatics competition where the winners will claim up to $20,000 in cash prizes to be used to further their research.

Contestants are expected to:

  • Attend a kick off meeting for the challenge
  • Attend regular check points over the course of the Challenge
  • Utilize multiple on-line resources to develop a hypothesis relevant to the mechanisms, treatment or sequelae of T1D
  • Manage their data according to FAIR practices for sound science
  • Share their protocol through protocols.io
  • Use on-line tools to provide preliminary in silico data to test their hypothesis
  • Present their work in a written and oral form to a panel of judges

As part of the D-Challenge, several resource providers have provided some starting materials and tutorials to help jump start hypothesis development.  We thank our partners:

  • The Signalling Pathways Project, which has produced a T1D “Consensome” that looks across multiple public transcriptomic datasets to make robust predictions about signaling pathways that are up or down regulated in T1D
  • protocols.io, which will host protocols created during the Challenge.
  • The T1D Knowledge Base, which provides browsing, searching, and analysis of human genetic information linked to T1D.
  • HIRN: Human Islet Research Network providing data sets.

Ongoing additional support will be provided to registered participants by data expert Neil McKenna PhD.

Register by Midnight PDT September 1, 2021