Grid Computing Planet   Earthweb  
Images Events Jobs Premium Services Media Kit Network Map E-mail Offers Vendor Solutions Webcasts
   subjects:
IT Management Webcasts:
The Role of Security in IT Service Management

Preparing for an IT Audit

More Webcasts


Search EarthWeb Network

internet.commerce
Be a Commerce Partner














Grid Computing Planet : News: University Awarded $2 Million NSF Grant for Protein Structure


Related Articles
National Science Foundation Awards $13.5 Million For "Infostructure" Development
Library Of Congress Goes Grid
University of Melbourne Expands Grid Work
IT Management Glossary
data mining
ERP
extranet
grid computing
intranet
network appliance
outsourcing
storage
VPN
virus
FREE Tech Newsletters

University Awarded $2 Million NSF Grant for Protein Structure
October 10, 2002
By Paul Shread

University at Buffalo scientists working in the field of protein-structure determination have been awarded a $2 million Information Technology Research grant by the National Science Foundation.

The UB project is designed to use new technologies such as Grid computing, data mining and collaborative environments to enhance protein-structure determination, a key tool in the rational drug-design process, which bases the discovery of new pharmaceuticals on precise knowledge of protein structures.

The Buffalo team is affiliated with the Strategically Targeted Academic Research (STAR) Center in Disease Modeling and Therapy Discovery at UB, sponsored by the New York State Office of Science, Technology and Academic Research.

The funding will enable the development of new software for crystallographers to tap computational and scientific power to enhance SnB, the widely used protein-structure determination software developed by scientists at UB and Hauptman-Woodward Medical Research Institute (HWI) in Buffalo.

When it became publicly available in 1995, SnB represented a quantum leap in structure determination, allowing researchers to solve structures with virtually no input from the user, UB said. Last year, the formula on which it was based, developed by Nobel Laureate Herbert Hauptman, president of HWI, was designated one of the top 10 algorithms of the 20th century by Computing in Science & Engineering magazine.

Through refinements and new editions of the software developed by UB and HWI researchers, this "black box" approach now is capable of solving the structures of molecules of thousands of non-hydrogen atoms, UB said. It also can solve critical substructures that allow for the determination of proteins with tens of thousands of atoms, which only a few years ago would have been regarded as impossible.

As emerging research in the fields of genomics and proteomics has shown, unraveling the structures of larger, complex proteins that may be important targets for new pharmaceuticals requires even more from SnB.

"SnB has had an enormous impact on the crystallographic community," said Russ Miller, UB Distinguished Professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering, principal investigator and director of UB's Center for Computational Research (CCR). "But its ultimate potential is unknown. This grant will allow us to make advances in structure determination by exploiting new computational paradigms."

One of those new paradigms, Miller said, is the computational Grid, a state-of-the-art platform in which hundreds, even thousands, of computers from across the nation and the world can be tapped to solve a single problem. Grid computing, he said, harnesses not just the machines' computing power, but also storage, device and personnel resources so they behave as a single environment.

"Creating a Grid-enabled version of SnB puts us in a position to really tackle larger structures and at the same time create collaborative environments between users of programs who can benefit from each other's expertise without working together in a traditional sense," Miller said.

The project will also enable Miller and colleagues to take advantage of new techniques in data mining, allowing a software agent to sift through enormous amounts of data that are deposited in an SnB data warehouse at CCR and identify critical patterns that can lead to more efficient structure determinations.

"Once the data are in the repository, the software agent will continually mine them in an effort to determine adjustments in parameter settings, so the next time someone uses the package to solve a structure with characteristics similar to those in the warehouse, SnB will be even more efficient," he said. "Essentially, it will be able to improve itself."

Once the software has been written that creates the appropriate collaborative and data-mining environments, the UB and HWI developers will begin to create a virtual community.

To create the Grid-enabled version of SnB, CCR staff are harnessing key resources, including a Dell server cluster that is one of the world's largest commodity-based clusters and a Pentium4 Dell cluster with Myrinet interconnectivity that is one of the most powerful machines in the world, as well as other machines from SGI, IBM and Sun.

Using a FakeSpace ImmersaDesk powered by SGI Onyx 2 and SGI 3300W visualization systems, CCR's visualization scientists are producing a collaborative environment that will allow SnB users around the globe to visually work together on structures.

In addition to Miller, investigators on the grant are Josephine Anstey, assistant professor of media study at UB who works on collaborative environments; Charles Weeks, senior research scientist at HWI and UB professor of structural biology, who originally developed SnB with Miller and Hauptman; and Aidong Zhang, UB professor of computer science and engineering, who studies and develops techniques for data mining.

Tools:
Add www.gridcomputingplanet.com to your favorites
Add www.gridcomputingplanet.com to your browser search box
IE 7 | Firefox 2.0 | Firefox 1.5.x
Receive news via our XML/RSS feed

News Archives



JupiterOnlineMedia

internet.comearthweb.comDevx.commediabistro.comGraphics.com

Search:

Jupitermedia Corporation has two divisions: Jupiterimages and JupiterOnlineMedia

Jupitermedia Corporate Info


Legal Notices, Licensing, Reprints, & Permissions, Privacy Policy.

Advertise | Newsletters | Tech Jobs | Shopping | E-mail Offers