$2.1 Million Grant from National Institutes of Health Seeds Collaboration to Expedite Applications from Human Genome Project
San Diego, CA, July 20, 2006 -- A team of researchers, led by Dr. Adam Godzik at the Burnham Institute for Medical Research, is designing tools to accelerate the interpretation, and potential use of, information gleaned from the human genome project.
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These new tools will be made available to researchers worldwide through open-source databases and may be applied ultimately in the design of smarter drugs.
Researchers are sequencing millions of genes per year in different genomic projects. Solving the structures of the protein products of these genes proceeds at a slower pace of between 3,000 and 5,000 per year. Using the structures of proteins that have already been solved, Dr. Godzik and co-principal investigators Drs. Pavel Pevzner, Yuzhen Ye and Piotr Cieplak will develop novel ways to extract rules and trends of how structures change and evolve. They will use these tools to predict how, for instance, a human protein would differ from its counterpart in mice or bacteria.
“Protein structures can be solved experimentally in a couple of months, sometimes weeks,” said Dr. Godzik, an academic participant in Calit2 and member of the Steering Committee of CAMERA, Calit2's new joint venture with J. Craig Venter Institute, funded by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, to deploy cyberinfrastructure for marine microbial genomics research. “Scientists around the world have already solved tens of thousands of them. Structures of many proteins can also be predicted on a computer in a matter of minutes, but the quality of such models is generally so poor that they are not useful in many applications, such as drug design. We have developed tools that allow us to learn from structures already solved and apply that knowledge to improve predicted structures of new proteins. This funding from the National Institutes of Health makes it possible for us to prove our concept and make our tools available to scientists worldwide.”
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“Dr. Godzik brings together an interdisciplinary team with an impressive track record,” said Dr. Jerry Li, Program Director of the National Institute of General Medical Sciences at the National Institutes of Health, which funded the new project. “By developing and using new computational approaches, the group will improve our ability to accurately model the three-dimensional structures of proteins, which are invaluable to functional studies and rational drug design.”
Adam Godzik, Ph.D., is Professor and Director of the Bioinformatics and Systems Biology Program at the Burnham Institute, and leader of the bioinformatics core of the Joint Center for Structural Genomics. Yuzhen Ye, Ph.D., and Piotr Cieplak, Ph.D., are Research Assistant Professor and Staff Scientist, respectively, at the Burnham Institute.
Related Links
Burnham Institute for Medical Research
Computer Science and Engineering Department
Joint Center for Structural Genomics
CAMERA
Media Contacts
Media Contacts:
Nancy Beddingfield, Burnham Institute (858) 646-3146, nbeddingfield@burnham.org
Doug Ramsey, UCSD/Calit2 (858) 822-5825, dramsey@ucsd.edu