Manuel Corpas' Blog

Genomes, Web 2.0 and Bioethics

Some 10 Current Interesting Challenges in (Computational) Biology

This is not an exhaustive list, but rather a compendium of current problems that I encounter on a regular basis. This post might be especially useful for students who want to find a challenging problem for their research or simply anyone interested to know some of the science that goes on at the Wellcome Trust Genome Campus and beyond.

  1. To understand genome variation. How to explain variation within and between species? What are the mechanisms that produced those changes? How can those changes explain different susceptibilities to diseases and traits?
  2. To predict a genotype given a phenotype. How to correlate phenotypic terms to specific mutations? How to encode phenotypes in a computationally friendly format?
  3. To understand genetic heritability of complex diseases like Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s or Stroke. GWAS studies have shown that the contribution of any one gene to specific complex diseases is meager or marginal in most cases. What models are needed for modeling mutation leading to disease? What pieces of the puzzle are missing?
  4. To optimally manage the data resulting from large scale experiments. How to store this data and make it accessible? Where to store it? Locally? In the cloud? How to make sure that no important data is lost?
  5. To optimally integrate data from disparate sources for analysis. Should we use federated systems? How to combine the ever-growing number of formats? What software to use to make possible such analyses? How to visualize this data more intuitively?
  6. Data privacy and accessibility. As more and more sensitive data is produced for analysis of patients’ genomic disorders, how not to hamper reproducibility of experiments? At the same time, how can we protect the privacy of patients? How to secure systems where sensitive data is stored?
  7. Understanding the effects of epigenetics in molecular regulation and disease. What mechanisms are available for molecular regulation? How does it affect gene expression? What molecular agents are involved in epigenetics regulation?
  8. Understanding the role of RNAs as enzymes and regulatory entities. How many different kinds of RNA are there? What is their function? How did they evolve?
  9. How do transmembrane proteins fold? Given a protein sequence, can we predict their final 3D functional state?  How does the celular membrane affect the folding process? What helper molecules are involved to make sure that the protein folds correctly?
  10. Automatic extraction and text mining. Given the current mass of scientific literature, how can we extract automatically this knowledge from text? How close can we get for computers to “understand” human language? How to structure scientific literature to make it more machine-readable?

Sure I am missing many other important topics. I do apologize for those that I missed. Feel free to add your own if you wish.

Filed under: Bioinformatics, Biology, , , , , , , ,

Why Should I Care About RNA?

I keep bumping into talks, articles and stuff related to the Bioinformatics of RNAs. It certainly looks appealing. I am not sure though what the fuss is about or whether it is as exciting as the DNA field. The promise of the Next Gen Sequencing and its impact in Science, Policy and Society are expected to be significant in the near future. Why should I care about RNAs though?

Here is a list of questions that I throw into the wild hoping to attract the attention of any experts in the field.

  1. Does any recent RNA breakthrough have the same potential to transform Society as DNA research is doing?
  2. Is RNA Bioinformatics an area that is appealing because not a lot of people are working on it? Or has it been fuelled by a new technique that is revolutionising it?
  3. Is the rate of accumulation of RNA data as steep as its DNA cousin?
  4. What are RNA research trends to watch out for?

The debate is open.

Post a comment if you want to say anything.

Filed under: Bioinformatics, Biology, , , ,

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