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\r\nThis work is supported by the Leo Foundation, the Novo Nordisk Foundation, the Lundbeck Foundation, the Aage Bangs Foundation and the A.P. Møller Foundation for the Advancement of Medical Sciences.
\r\nWe would like to thank the faculty of Health and Medical Sciences at the University of Copenhagen for continuous support.
\r\n\r\n The Human Skin Atlas is a research initiative aiming to advance translational skin research by providing a resource with mass spectrometry-based proteome data from healthy and diseased skin.\r\n
\r\nThe Skin Atlas is a comprehensive and spatially resolved, quantitative proteomic atlas of the different layers and cell types in healthy human skin comprising almost 11 000 proteins.
\r\nThe Skin Immune Cell Atlas comprises a highly resolved quantitative proteomic atlas of the cellular subsets of human healthy skin including endothelial cells, melanocytes, mast cells, macrophages, dendritic cells and epidermal and dermal T cells.
\r\nThis is an in-depth proteomic characterization of skin- and blood-derived ILC2s and ILC3s and describes over 6 600 proteins
\r\nThis is an in-debt proteomic characterization of microdissected melanoma cells and nevi cells within same patient specimen. We have quantified over 4400 proteins that include novel drivers in the malignant transformation of melanoma.
\r\nComing soon...
\r\nComing soon...
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\r\nThe Danish podcast “Hudlægens Bord” (The Skin Doctor’s Table) is for those citizens and other skin-curious people, who want to dig deeper into the understanding of the skin, and it conveys knowledge with challenging details and nuances in a lively way.
\r\n \r\nWe're launching 12 new SkinStories spotlighting skin diseases unique to certain regions. Seeking authors from high-prevalence countries. Please share suggestions and author info at hello@skin.science.
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