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01/26/04
-- The Commission of the European Union has awarded
12,000,000 Euro to 24 bioinformatics groups based
in 14 countries throughout Europe to create a
pan-European BioSapiens Network of Excellence
in Bioinformatics. The network aims to address
the current fragmentation of European bioinformatics
by creating a virtual research institute and by
organizing a European school for training in bioinformatics.
Data
overload is reaching epidemic proportions among
molecular biologists. As genome-sequencing efforts
continue apace and are being supplemented by new
types of information from microarray, proteomics
and structural genomics projects, biologists are
literally drowning in a sea of data. Bioinformatics
- the science of storing, retrieving and analysing
large amounts of biological information - is struggling
to keep up and is also contributing to the information
overload by generating large numbers of predictions
about the biochemical functions of gene products.
These predictions need to be tested in the lab,
but the infrastructure to "complete the circle"
between computational biologists and experimentalists
needs to be improved. This will have to change
if we are to fulfil the ultimate promise of genomics:
better quality of life.
"Europe has excellent bioinformatics environments
in many countries, but in order to maximize the
overall impact it needs to strengthen and reinforce
that excellence by restructuring and coordinating
existing research capacities and the way research
is carried out," explains Janet Thornton,
Director of the European Bioinformatics Institute
(EBI) and coordinator of the BioSapiens project.
To help realize the goal of a single European
research area, which aims to make the best use
of Europe's research resources, the Commission
of the European Union has devised some new instruments
as part of its sixth Framework Programme (FP6),
the EU's main means of funding research in Europe.
One of these instruments, the "Network of
Excellence" (NoE), is designed to tackle
the fragmentation of European research by creating
durable structures for future research in certain
priority areas, including life sciences, genomics
and biotechnology for health.
"The BioSapiens Network of Excellence captures
the most important objectives of an NoE,"
explains Prof. Thornton. "Firstly, it will
coordinate and focus excellent research in bioinformatics,
by creating a Virtual Institute for Genome Annotation.
Annotation is the process by which features of
the genes or proteins stored in a database are
extracted from other sources, defined and interpreted.
Secondly, the Institute will establish a permanent
European School of Bioinformatics, to train bioinformaticians
and to encourage best practice in the exploitation
of genome annotation data for biologists. Thirdly,
whilst BioSapiens is primarily a basic research
network, it will indirectly benefit the exploitation
of biological information to address important
social objectives, including improved health-care,
better drugs, new vaccines, personalized medicine,
and improved understanding of diet and health.
By understanding how the normal human organism
functions and develops we can improve diet, behaviour
and environment to optimize quality of life,"
she adds.
BioSapiens is coordinated by a steering committee
comprising Janet Thornton (chair), Søren
Brunak (Technical University of Denmark), Anna
Tramontano (University of Rome "La Sapienza")
and Alfonso Valencia (Consejo Superior de Investigaciones
Científicas, Madrid), and a project manager,
Kerstin Nyberg (EBI).
How will this virtual institute work? It will
be divided into nodes, each focused on one aspect
of genome annotation. The annotations generated
will be integrated and made freely accessible
to all through a single portal on the web, and
will be used as a means of guiding future experimental
work.
"Experimental validation of a statistically
significant subset of computational predictions
will be an integral part of the process, leading
to an iterative improvement in methods,"
explains Thornton. The annotations will be integrated
using DAS (Distributed Annotation System), an
Open Source system developed by researcher Lincoln
Stein and colleagues at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
(NY, USA) for exchanging annotations on genomic
sequence data. "DAS heralds a new era for
database structure, where information is distributed
by a network rather than a single site,"
explains Søren Brunak.
Meetings and workshops organized by the institute
will encourage cooperation and reduce duplication
of effort. They will also be an important medium
for fostering closer collaboration between experimentalists
and bioinformaticians. Some of these events will
be tailored to industry, whose participation the
network is keen to encourage. "The development
of methods, tools, and servers in close interaction
with experimentalists is one feature that distinguishes
the network from previous pan-European efforts
in bioinformatics," says Thornton, "and
although there are 24 formal partners, BioSapiens
is not a closed shop: once the infrastructure
is established, a primary goal is to make this
an open network to promote bioinformatics throughout
Europe."
One important aim of the network will be to set
up a permanent school of bioinformatics. "There
is a clear need to train and recruit creative
and innovative young scientists in bioinformatics
and at the same time to help users located in
experimental labs to keep up with the developments
in the field," explains Anna Tramontano,
who will coordinate the school's activities. "The
network will provide extensive training at all
levels, from basic courses for experimentalists
to more advanced training for bioinformatics experts,"
she adds.
As well as providing understanding that will contribute
to better health care in the future, a coordinated
bioinformatics effort in Europe could have far-reaching
economic impact. "The network will stimulate
Europe's economic growth by creating new business
themes and employment, improving European competitiveness
in the bioinformatics and life science industries,
and promoting mobility and knowledge sharing,"
explains Janet Thornton. "BioSapiens will
also help to maintain Europe's strong global position
in bioinformatics, allowing Europe to compete
with the major investments made in this area in
the USA, Canada and Japan. When Europeans work
together, maximizing collaboration and minimizing
duplication, we are better able to meet major
challenges such as exploiting the ever-increasing
volumes of data and ensuring Europe's full participation
in global scientific initiatives," she concludes.
Source: European Molecular Biology Laboratory
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