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Monday, January 4, 2005
WRITER: Kathleen Cason, 706542-7421, kmc@ovpr.uga.edu
CONTACT: Jessica Kissinger, 706542-6562, Jkissing@uga.edu
Eileen Kraemer, 706542-5799, Eileen@cs.uga.edu
John A. Miller, 706542-3440, jam@cs.uga.edu
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA PARTNERS WITH UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
FOR BIO-DEFENSE AND INFECTIOUS DISEASE RESEARCH PROJECT
ATHENS, GA. – The University of Georgia signed a five-year
$3.0 million subcontract Wednesday to develop a database that will
contain comprehensive information about some pathogens on a bio-defense
priority list established by the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Disease.
The subcontract teams UGA with the University of Pennsylvania to
develop a “virtual database” that serves as a single access
point to genomic and related information about parasites in the phylum
Apicomplexa, which includes organisms that cause malaria and toxoplasmosis.
NIAID, part of the National Institutes of Health, awarded a total
of eight contracts in 2004 to establish national Bioinformatics Resource
Centers, including the PennUGA award.
Jessica Kissinger, assistant professor of genetics and member of
UGA’s Center for Tropical and Emerging Global Diseases, is the
principal investigator for UGA; co-principal investigators are Eileen
Kraemer, associate professor of computer science, and John A. Miller,
professor of computer science.
NIH has funded many genome sequence projects over the past decade,
including more than 50 organisms that either are considered to be
biothreats or are related to emerging or re-emerging infectious diseases.
Once a genome is sequenced, a database project must be developed to
provide access to the data and provide tools to analyze it.
“You have to be able to read the sequenced genome, use it,
learn it and study it,” Kissinger said. “Few of the genome
projects had a database project built into the original sequence proposal.”
Tools already have been developed to facilitate database construction
for single organisms. However, as more genomes are sequenced, additional
information can be gathered by comparing one genome to another.
Currently, existing apicomplexan databases do not provide access
to information about multiple organisms, making comparisons difficult.
Simultaneous access to information about multiple pathogens may accelerate
development of new vaccines, diagnostics and therapeutics.
Also, scientists want immediate access to as much information as
possible about a pathogen in the event of a sudden disease outbreak,
Kissinger said.
The UGAPenn team plans to develop a database that links existing
databases for Plasmodium species, the causative agent of malaria;
Toxoplasma gondii, a widespread parasite that is dangerous for pregnant
women and immuno-suppressed individuals; and Cryptosporidum parvum,
a common intestinal parasite that is also dangerous for the immuno-suppressed.
“We could make the database [ApiDB] for these organisms by
collecting all of the data together in one location,” Kissinger
said. “I call that the vacuum-cleaner approach. But there’s
too much data to suck it all up so new approaches are needed.”
Instead, the UGA team will use a relatively new technology called “Web
services” to link the multiple databases. Web services technology
allows one database to talk to another database.
“In fact there will be multiple separate databases,” Kraemer
said. “But with this Web service layer that will go on top of
them, users will have the illusion that there is one database. They’ll
be able to ask a single question that applies to multiple databases
and get a response.”
The database for Plasmodium (PlasmoDB) is already well advanced;
for the other parasites, sequence data is just becoming available.
But for all the organisms, scientists continually contribute new information
that will have to be added to these databases.
“Penn is largely producing the infrastructure and tools to
store and analyze all the different data types,” Kraemer said. “We
are working to produce the Web services infrastructure that will sit
on top of that and allow the multiple separate databases to be linked.”
Each UGA collaborator contributes special skills to the project:
Miller has the Web service expertise, Kraemer has user interface and
visualization background, and Kissinger is expert in the use of molecular
and computational tools to study parasite genomes.
“There’s a tremendous amount of research involved in
how to integrate the data -- how do you link this to that. It’s
actually very hard,”Kissinger said. “But, that said, once
you figure how to solve the problem, you have to put it on the Web,
make it public, make it work and keep it all going. That’s a
huge effort.”
**The other NIAID awardees are developing databases that provide
access to information about pathogens and vectors such as bacteria
that cause anthrax, plague, and water and food-borne diseases; viruses
that cause rabies, Ebola and influenza; and vectors such as mosquitoes.
“We hope some of the technologies that we develop to link our
databases will be useful for linking to the other databases created
by the eight Bioinformatics Resource Centers,” Kissinger said.
UGA’s Center for Tropical and Emerging Global Diseases, founded
in 1998, fosters multidisciplinary research on parasites and vectors
that cause various tropical diseases.
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