The objective of the BioSapiens Network of Excellence is to provide a large-scale effort to annotate human genome using both informatics tools and input from experimentalists. The Network will create a European Virtual Institute for Genome Annotation, bringing together many of the best laboratories in Europe. This institute will help to improve bioinformatics research in Europe and encourage cooperation between various laboratories.
The BioSapiens network tries also to integrate experimentalists and bioinformaticians, through a directed programme of genome analysis, focused on specific biological problems. The annotations generated by the Institute will be available in the public domain and easily accessible on the web. This will be achieved initially through a distributed annotation system (DAS), which will evolve to take advantage of new developments in the GRID.
The Institute will establish a permanent European School of Bioinformatics, to train bioinformaticians and to encourage best practise in the exploitation of genome annotation data for biologists. The courses and meetings will be open to all scientists throughout Europe, and available at all levels, from basic courses for experimentalists to more advanced training for experts. The BioSapiens NoE will increase European competitiveness, by new discoveries, increased integration, expert training and improved tools and services, and enhance Europe’s role in the academic and industrial exploitation of genomics.
…BioInfoBank network and developed through a spin-off program. The institute is not only involved in research but also initiates the commercial exploitation of scientific discoveries. The main scientific focus of…
Deciphering the information on genome sequences in terms of the biological function of the genes and proteins is a major challenge of the post-genomic era. Currently, the bulk of function assignments for newly sequenced genomes is performed using bioinformatics tools that infer the function of a gene on the basis of sequence similarity with other genes of known function. It is now well recognised that these primary, sequence similarity-based function annotation procedures are frequently inaccurate and error prone. Continuing to use them without clearly defining the limits of their applicability would lead to an unmanageable propagation of errors that could jeopardise progress in Biology. On the other hand, various novel bodies of data and resources are becoming available. These provide information on context-based aspects of the biological function of genes, namely on physical and functional interactions between genes and proteins, and on whole networks and processes. In parallel structural genomics efforts world wide are providing a much better coverage of the structural motifs adopted by proteins and on their interactions. The availability of these additional and novel data offers an unprecedented opportunity for the development of methods for incorporating higher-level functional features into the annotation pipeline.
The GeneFun project aims at addressing these two important issues. The issue of annotation errors will de addressed by developing criteria for evaluating the reliability of the annotations currently available in databases. These criteria will be used to assign reliability scores to these annotations and will be incorporated into standard annotation pipelines, for future use. The issue of incorporating higher-level features into functional annotations will be addressed by combining sequence and structure information in order to identify non-linear functional features (e.g. interaction sites), and by integrating available and newly developed methods for inferring function from higher-level and context-based information (protein domain architecture, protein-protein interaction, genomic context such as gene order etc.).
To achieve these aims several European groups with strong track record in developing novel methods and analyses in comparative genomics, structural- and systems- oriented bioinformatics, and in information technology, have teamed up with an experimental group from Canada, which is well known for its outstanding achievements in the field of structural and functional proteomics. The expected output of the GeneFun project is: improved procedures for inferring function on the basis of sequence similarity, a set of procedures for predicting non-linear functional features from sequence and 3D structure in a more automated way, and benchmarked procedures for predicting context-based functional features. Major efforts will be devoted to devising protocols that optimally combine the results from several methods. In particular Web-based servers to the individual and combined procedures will be developed, and made available to the scientific community. The community will be introduced to these new tools through open workshops and training sessions.
The four principal objectives of the ELM consortium are to (1) design, (2) develop, (3) maintain and (4) apply, a novel infrastructure resource devoted to the prediction of functional motifs in protein sequences. ELM (short for Eukaryotic Linear Motif) will be both “virtual” – provided electronically – and “distributed” – provided by a network of sites. Effective prediction of short motifs will require the implementation of hitherto unique context-dependent filtering software. The ELM resource will be made available to researchers as WWW servers and as a package for local installation.
The four principle objectives correspond approximately to overlapping phases of the ELM project:
Design: The initial design requirements are to integrate: (I) a relational database; (II) data input requirements; (III) new application software; (IV) private consortium web servers; and (V) public web servers. The partners will collectively contribute both the inferred biological needs and the underlying technical specifications. A document will be prepared that describes the internal ELM architecture. Subsequent revisions to the document will be ratified by all ELM partners. A web-based input form will ensure that data input meets the internal specification.
Develop: An extensive development phase is needed to create the software needed to effectively query ELM and to generate useful predictions. Various context filters will be developed as separate modules. The easiest filter modules will be completed first, and the more complex filters later in the project. As the modules are completed, they will be integrated into the ELM resource as serial filters. For optimal performance, the fastest executing filters will be accessed first, so that only the surviving motif candidates are passed on to the slower filters.
Maintain: The ELM servers will be continually maintained and extended as the project matures. Data will be continually added into the ELM resource and older data will be revised as new biological findings are published in the literature. While many motifs are already known, during the project there will be a steady stream of new motif publications. In the mature phase of ELM, releases will be scheduled at 6 month intervals.
Apply: As the ELM resource matures, it will become increasingly powerful and useful to experimentalists. Predicted motifs will suggest unexpected functional interactions or help to confirm suspected but poorly characterised ones. The consortium partners, and their close collaborators in the host institutes, will investigate predicted motifs relevant to their research interests. Verification (and to an extent exclusion) of predicted linear motifs will lead to enhanced understanding of multifunctional multidomain proteins, many of which assemble (via linear motifs) into huge complexes whose aggregate functions are hard to investigate with current experimental approaches.
The new partner will develop an additional ab-initio filter to estimate the conformational preferences of parts of proteins. The main objective of the task proposed by the new partner is to provide a reliable tool for detection of protease target sites. This new objective represents an expansion of the ongoing work complementary to the objectives outlined in WP2 and W3.