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Selected Projects in Bioinformatics

Learn more about the bioinformatics projects selected by Microsoft Research.


Selected Projects in Bioinformatics

Collaborative Molecular Modeling Environment
Peter Kuhn, The Scripps Research Institute, U.S.

A modern day collaborative lab environment often entails research that involves use of widely different types of data like gel-pictures, purification chromatograms, mass spectrometry, diffraction images, tabulated cloning results, literature references, etc. We describe a new application that enables the bench scientist to quickly attach annotations to a 3-D structure or 2-D image.  These annotations are stored in a SQL Server database managed by the Office SharePoint Server which provides features such as document versioning and organization. A researcher can quickly create a site for a project, choose an image or 3-D structure as the contextual basis and begin annotating in minutes. Other authorized users can immediately see the new annotations which can be browsed, sorted, edited and added to, spurring discussion and a flow of ideas.

The need to collaborate in a multi-domain networked lab environment requires the ability to share diverse types of data with several users but on a common context.  The C-ME application provides a shared context (PDB structure or 2-D image) on which annotations may be placed presenting additional information to the protein structure or microscope image.

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Computational Tools for Population Biology
Tanya Berger-Wolf, University of Illinois at Chicago, U.S.

The goal of this research is to develop algorithmic tools that will allow biologist to exploit the imminent, widespread availability of sensor-derived data in order to find connections between ecology and behavior and behavior and social processes.  Our approach is to combine ideas from social network analysis, internet computing, distributed computing, and graph algorithm design to solve problems in population biology, both animal and human (e.g., epidemiology). We focus on the dynamic aspects of social interactions and develop computational tools that address the time component of interactions explicitly.

Our goal is to develop a novel conceptual framework to accurately describe the social context of an individual at time scales matching changes in individual and group activity. Existing theory, both for analysis of social and other pairwise interaction networks (such as WWW, internet, cellphones), is based on identifying trends that develop over long periods of time. Such a static theory is too crude for determining the linkage between social context and the emergence of fine-grained individual or group behavior.

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Microsoft Research Support for iGEM
Randy Rettberg, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, U.S.

Synthetic Biology lies at a junction between engineering and biology, with a research goal to learn how to best design and build engineered biological systems. Our education goal is to enable all interested students to participate directly in the work of learning how to engineer biology.

iGEM started as a month-long design class at MIT in 2003 and 2004. With NSF support, 5 schools participated in a design competition over the summer of 2004. With Microsoft iCampus support, iGEM grew to 13 schools in 2005.

In 2006, thirty-seven student teams from schools in Asia, Europe, Latin America, Africa, and the US have been specifying, designing, building, and testing biological systems made from standard, interchangeable biological parts. The students are highly motivated to build, to design, and to compete. In the process, biology students learn approaches for organizing complex systems and practical tools for design, modeling, and simulation while engineering students are able to immerse themselves in biology.

The impact of iGEM extends beyond the students, energizing biological curricula at the participating schools, changing the attitudes of instructors and professors towards active biology education and the emerging field of Synthetic Biology. Several of the iGEM schools taught special classes in Synthetic Biology in the spring in order to be ready for the summer competition, and MIT is just one of the schools to add a Synthetic Biology module from iGEM to the undergraduate biological engineering lab.

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SQL Server-based Comparative Analysis of RNA Sequences, Structures, & Evolution
Robin Gutell, University of Texas at Austin, U,S.

Our understanding of the structure, function, and evolution of RNA molecules has increased significantly with recent improvements in sequencing and crystallography. The accuracy and detail that can be deciphered from RNA data is directly proportional to the creativity, design and speed of the analysis as well the organization and accessibility of the data.

The amount of sequence and structure data has increased by orders of magnitude over the years and the objectives of analysis have become more ambitious and sophisticated. We are now developing a new computer system using SQLServer 2005 which will integrate more than 500,000 sequences and associated structural and phylogenetic information into a database for hosting analysis and ad-hoc data retrieval tasks.

Our goal is to perform the majority of the analysis within SQLServer, including sequence alignment, covariation analysis and other types of statistical and phylogenetic queries using TSQL and CLR stored procedures. Preliminary work has demonstrated that this concept is fully functional.

 

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