BBSRC Portfolio Analyser
Award details
Upgrade of Grid resources for Structural Bioinformatics Research in the Bloomsbury Centre for Bioinformatics
Reference
BB/E013201/1
Principal Investigator / Supervisor
Professor David Jones
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Dr Kevin Bryson
,
Professor Andrew Martin
,
Professor David Moss
,
Professor Christine Orengo
,
Professor Helen Saibil
,
Professor Adrian Shepherd
,
Professor Lorenz Wernisch
Institution
University College London
Department
Computer Science
Funding type
Research
Value (£)
200,453
Status
Completed
Type
Research Grant
Start date
01/04/2007
End date
31/03/2008
Duration
12 months
Abstract
This proposal is a request for funding a major hardware upgrade of the Grid resources available in the Bloomsbury Centre for Bioinformatics. The present facilities are provided by Linux clusters in the UCL Dept. of Computer Science, the UCL Dept. of Biochemistry and the Birkbeck Dept. of Crystallography. Many of the nodes in the present clusters are outside current maintenance contracts - the UCL CS cluster for example was installed in 2001 and is now in a state of poor repair with nodes failing on a regular basis. A specific issue that has arisen is the recent rapid expansion of the sequence databases. A large fraction of the computing time used on the existing Grid resources relates to a continuous stream of PSI-BLAST jobs for database updates and genome annotation pipelines. With the rapid expansion of the sequence databases, many of the existing nodes do not have enough physical memory to allow PSI-BLAST jobs to be run - and this greatly reduces the throughput we can achieve. Additionally we would like to standardise on a 64-bit operating system and many of the existing nodes do not support the x64/EM-64 instruction set. To ensure maximum utilisation of the cluster, we will deploy the Jyde system which was developed in the BBSRC e-Protein Grid Pilot Project. This is a very robust and very extensively tested resource management system which has proven very effective and very easy to install and maintain.
Summary
With the massive increase in the amount of biological data, there is an increasing need for very powerful computing facilities to allow this data to be analysed. One of the key strengths of the Bloomsbury Centre for Bioinformatics is it's world leading expertise in structural bioinformatics i.e. the use of computing to analyse and predict the structures of complex biological molecules. The projects range from simulations of how proteins fold to novel image processing to allow the structures of proteins to be determined by electron microscopy. Other projects entail mapping of protein structures onto the sequences of all the genes in a genome and clustering all known protein families in order to better annotate their functions. In this project we are seeking to setup 3 new clusters of computers in the three main departments which form the Centre. Each department focuses on different projects and so have specific hardware requirements for their clusters, however for the very largest projects (e.g. folding all of the proteins in a genome) we are able to combine the power of all three clusters using special software (called Jyde) developed in an earlier BBSRC project.
Committee
Closed Committee - Biomolecular Sciences (BMS)
Research Topics
X – not assigned to a current Research Topic
Research Priority
X – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative
Research Equipment Initiative 2006 (RE6) [2006]
Funding Scheme
X – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
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