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March
23, 2004
UCSD And SDSC To Host National
Computational Molecular Biology Meetings
By Doug Ramsey
Faculty and researchers
affiliated with the University of California, San Diego’s
Jacobs School of Engineering and San Diego Supercomputer Center
(SDSC) will host what has become one of the most influential
conferences in the world dealing with bioinformatics. This year’s
Research in Computational Molecular Biology – RECOMB 2004
for short – will take place March 27-31 in San Diego (http://recomb04.sdsc.edu/),
and will feature the best research in bioinformatics, combined
with invited talks from experimental biologists. “This
is a scientific forum for theoretical advances in computational
biology and their applications in molecular biology and medicine,”
says UCSD pharmacology professor Philip Bourne, who is Director
of Integrative Biosciences at SDSC and also Conference General
Chair of RECOMB 2004. “The origins of the conference came
from the mathematical and computational side of the field, but
the effective use of computational techniques for biological
innovation is also an important aspect of the conference.”
SDSC took the lead in sponsoring the 2004 conference.
“Roughly 700
people have registered for the conference, compared to only
250 at the first RECOMB in 1997,” says Pavel Pevzner,
the Ronald A. Taylor Chair Professor in computer science and
engineering at the Jacobs School, who co-founded the conference
and chairs RECOMB 2004’s steering committee. “Now
only 15 percent of submitted papers are accepted, which is comparable
to the acceptance rate at top biology journals. And it is truly
an international conference: last year’s RECOMB was in
Berlin, the next will be in Boston, then Venice.”
Some of the big themes
to be showcased at this year’s conference include comparative
genomics (as influenced by the complete sequencing of the human,
mouse and other genomes), regulatory genomics, and gene networks.
One of the highlights of each RECOMB conference is a collection
of nine keynotes by internationally-recognized researchers about
landmark advances in computational and experimental research
and new directions in the field of computational molecular biology.
Other topics include molecular sequence analysis, molecular
evolution, protein structure, gene expression, drug design,
combinatorial libraries, computational proteomics, as well as
structural and functional genomics. Participating organizations
will also use the meeting to unveil new resources for the community:
SDSC’s Bourne, who co-directs the Protein Data Bank (PDB)
(http://www.rcsb.org/pdb/),
says the supercomputer center will be demonstrating a new version
of the the single worldwide repository for the processing and
distribution of 3-D biological macromolecular structure data,
now totaling nearly 25,000 structures.
Two UCSD biology professors
will deliver keynotes this year: Russell Doolittle will deliver
the Stanislaw Ulam Memorial Computational Biology Lecture, on
lessons from 50 years of sequence analysis; and William McGinnis
will talk about evolutionary change in developmental genetic
networks. Another San Diego-based researcher delivering a keynote
speech is Elizabeth Winzeler of the Scripps Research Institute,
who will discuss systems biology and malaria. (For the full
list, go to the conference website, click on Program Information,
then Invited Keynotes.)
The conference will
showcase over 350 research posters, and has also spawned satellite
workshops to attract top researchers in specific fields such
as comparative genomics and proteomics. This year, the First
Annual RECOMB Regulatory Genomics satellite workshop will take
place on the UCSD campus March 26-27. (http://www.cse.ucsd.edu/%7Eeeskin/recombreg04/)
It is being organized by Jacobs School computer science and
engineering professor Eleazar Eskin. Both Eskin and Pevzner
are affiliated with the California Institute for Telecommunications
and Information Technology [Cal-(IT)²]. “We now know
that the vast majority of genes are almost identical between
human and mouse, yet men and mice are so different,” explains
Eskin. “The differences most likely stem from variations
in the networks that regulate genes, and one of the main challenges
facing researchers today is deciphering these regulatory mechanisms.
This workshop focuses on how genes interact and how the transcriptional
mechanisms of the genes work.”
The recent sequencing
of the human and mouse genomes – and the upcoming release
of the complete rat and chimpanzee genomes – are enabling
research methods in bioinformatics to enhance understanding
of gene regulation. Those methods include motif-finding algorithms
that can help identify regulatory elements. Among the research
challenges to be discussed at the satellite workshop: scaling
to very large samples; incorporating multiple genomes; detection
of weak signals; and incorporating different types of genomic
data such as protein localization data and gene expression.
The Regulatory Genomics
workshop will feature 14 invited talks and 10 refereed papers,
with more than 125 specialists expected to attend. “We
also have an industry roundtable on how basic science in the
academic environment is transformed into mechanisms that bring
drug discovery closer,” says Eskin. “Scientists
from Astrazeneca, Compugen, ZymoGenetics, Agilent, Novartis
and Incyte will talk about how they are using new computational
techniques for drug discovery.” Other aspects of gene
regulation to be covered during the workshop include: modeling
and recognition of regulatory elements; identification and modeling
of cis-regulatory regions; modeling the structure and function
of the regulatory region; and comparative genomics.
One of the new computational
tools that will be highlighted at the meeting is PathBLAST,
designed by UCSD bioengineering professor Trey Ideker. It allows
biologists to compare protein interaction networks – the
cell’s system through which genes and proteins communicate.
As scientists begin to identify protein interaction networks,
PathBLAST and tools like it can be used to quickly compare interaction
networks among different organisms. “These kinds of studies
could have a huge payoff in comparing such things as viral networks
to human networks, possibly allowing drug companies to develop
products that target cellular pathways unique to viruses,”
says Ideker. So far, scientists can use www.pathblast.org
to compare networks of interest to those of certain yeast, bacteria,
fruitfly and worm organisms.
According to RECOMB
co-founder Pevzner, it is no coincidence that RECOMB 2004 and
the satellite workshop on regulatory genomics are taking place
in San Diego. “San Diego has become a bioinformatics superpower
in the past five years,” he says. “UCSD has hired
informatics leaders in Bioengineering, in Computer Science and
Engineering, at SDSC, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, School
of Medicine and other departments. All of a sudden, UCSD has
become one of the top universities in terms of accepted papers
at major conferences, and the combination of traditional bioinformatics
and systems biology has created major synergy for UCSD.”
Media Contact: Doug
Ramsey, (858) 822-5825
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