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The Era of Biognostic Machinery

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Good example of the kind of instruments to come... So much wonderful data... Growth of Protein Databank. Growth of Biomedical Literature ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Era of Biognostic Machinery


1
The Era of Biognostic Machinery
  • Lawrence Hunter, Ph.D., Director
  • Center for Computational Pharmacology
  • http//compbio.uchsc.edu

2
The Ultimate Biological Irony
  • Human understanding of our own genome will
    require partnership with biognostic machines

3
What is a Biognostic Machine?
  • From the Greek??????(life) and????????(knowing)
  • Two kinds of biognostic machines
  • Instruments that produce data about a living
    things in molecular detail and with genomic
    breadth
  • Bioinformatics systems that bring to bear
    existing knowledge in the computational analysis
    of data

4
Gene Chips as Biognostic Instruments
  • Good example of the kind of instruments to
    come...
  • Gene chips read out the expression (production)
    of each gene in different tissues
  • Gene expression is important,but just the first
    step in realizingthe blueprints in our DNA
  • Overwhelming amounts of data!Each chip is 40,000
    genes anddozens of chips for each study

5
Other kinds of biognostic instruments
  • High throughput SNP genotyping automation
  • Finds millions of tiny genetic differences among
    people
  • Combinatoral Chemistry robotics
  • Tests 50,000 potentialnew drugs per day

6
So much wonderful data...
Growth of Protein Databank
Growth of Biomedical Literature
  • More than 11,000,000 biomedical journal articles
    in Medline
  • 600,000 new articles per year, accelerating at
    10 per year

7
...Is Still Not Enough!
  • Statistics 101 Never test more hypotheses than
    you have data, since you will find impressive
    looking results just by chance.
  • Each chip is effectively testing 40,000
    hypotheses!
  • Run a lot of chips? Not at 1000 each!
  • So what can we do with all this data?

8
Invent Biognostic Computers
  • Take traditional statistics as far as possible,
    e.g.
  • New corrections for multiple testing,
    randomization approaches
  • But also...
  • Integrate existing knowledge into computational
    analysis.Our computer programs have to know
    about biology!
  • Bayesian inference
  • Knowledge-based interpretation of high throughput
    results
  • Managing diverse sources of knowledge, including
    the biomedical literature

9
Bayesian Inference
  • An old idea gaining new life
  • A principled way of combining data with prior
    knowledge
  • We balance the belief in new results against how
    closely they fit with our existing ideas
  • Where do priors come from?

Rev. Thomas Bayes, 1701-1765
10
A Knowledge-base of Molecular Biology
  • A knowledge-base encodes facts and concepts in a
    computationally useful representation
  • General relationships, e.g.Part-of, Has-parts,
    Kind-of
  • Specific relationships, e.g.Binds-to,
    regulates-gene
  • Supports many kinds ofinference (not just
    Bayesian)

11
Knowledge visualization tools(in partnership
with Accenture)
12
How do we create biognostic computer programs?
  • Knowledge management and organization tools from
    other domains (especially executive information
    systems)
  • Still takes a lot of expert human time and effort
  • Good community efforts in some areas (e.g. Gene
    Ontology Consortium) can be leveraged effectively
  • Once a bootstrap knowledge-base exists, extend it
    by automated information extraction from
    textbooks, review articles and journals.

13
A special kind of supercomputer
  • Recent grant from IBM Life Sciences
  • Latest p690 Regatta architecture
  • Most important aspect is not speed!
  • Extraordinarily large memory
  • 64,000MB of RAM, about 1000x the memory of a
    desktop machine
  • Allows us to load both all the data and all the
    knowledge into memory at once

14
Why CU?
  • Talent
  • World class researchers in many relevant
    areasGene chips, proteomic mass spec,
    macromolecularstructure determination, high
    throughput genotyping
  • Technology
  • Biognostic instrument facilities are top tier for
    an academic institution. We are within reach of
    the very best.
  • Supercomputing facilities for knowledge-driven
    applications
  • Teamwork
  • Unique culture of collaboration that transcends
    traditional boundaries

15
What can we achieve?
  • Cognitive Disability Applications
  • Pilot application was in animal models of
    alcoholism, fetal alcohol syndrome and
    alcohol-related dementias.
  • Pharmacology
  • Identification of synergistic drug targets
  • Relationships between individual genotype and
    drug response
  • Development of novel biotherapies
  • Stem cell differentiation signals
  • Metabolic engineering

16
The Road Ahead
  • Three directions must be pursued simultaneously
  • Bringing our instrumentation to the very first
    rank, including engineering new generations of
    instruments.
  • Extending the knowledge-base and developing novel
    computational methods that take full advantage of
    the it and supercomputer
  • Close collaborations on specific bio/medical
    research projects taking advantage of the latest
    instruments and bioinformatics techniques.
    Creation of a broad biognostic infrastructure to
    support that research.
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