Award details

EBI Metagenomics - enabling the reconstruction of microbial populations

ReferenceBB/R015171/2
Principal Investigator / Supervisor Prof. Christopher Quince
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Institution Earlham Institute
DepartmentResearch Faculty
Funding typeResearch
Value (£) 15,051
StatusCompleted
TypeResearch Grant
Start date 01/10/2020
End date 06/09/2021
Duration11 months

Abstract

unavailable

Summary

unavailable

Impact Summary

Metagenomics is a rapidly expanding field and the depth and breadth of data are constantly increasing. At the same time, experimental approaches for investigating different microbiomes are constantly improving, providing deeper insights into microbes occupying particular environments. The use of metagenomics is widespread in research projects associated with BBSRC strategic priorities - agriculture and food security, industrial biotechnology and bioscience for health - and the field represents the epitome of data driven biology. This proposal will contribute to the continued support and development of the world leading EBI metagenomics (EMG) resource. Moreover, its expansion to offer assembly (and genomic reconstruction) as a public service will make EMG unique in the world of metagenomics analysis provision. Moreover, the application of assembly workflows will be taken to an unprecedented level of scale, scope and precision, allowing even deeper insights into the microbial world. This will enable the scientific community to make the leap from correlative observations to mechanistic hypothesis generation. Such deep knowledge will be of particular importance for cross cutting themes, such as understanding antimicrobial resistance, discovery of new secondary metabolites (e.g antimicrobial agents), host-microbe interactions (plant/animal) and microbial ecology. The scientific community benefits from EMG in many ways. Primarily it provides freely available services for analysis and archiving (via the ENA) of microbiome sequence data, helping democratise the research field by overcoming limitations of compute and informatics expertise. It also provides a platform for discovery of analysed metagenomics data, already amassing over 100,000 datasets (representing nearly a petabyte of processed data). These are uniformly analysed, enabling comparability and meta-analysis across projects and biomes. Archiving of sequence data with rich experimental metadata also encourages data re-use. Beyond this, EMG outputs will have applications in a wide range of academic and industrial fields, including enzyme discovery, environmental science, diagnostics and animal/human health, as assembly begins to provide a more complete picture of microbial communities. The results of the project will be of exceptional value to the commercial sector, and the benefits will eventually feed through to the public, in the form of new antibiotics for humans and livestock, higher agricultural yields from the understanding of socio-ecological interplay (e.g., food chain microbes) and expanded discovery of novel enzymes capable of operating at extremes, such as psychrophilic enzymes for detergents, or with novel catalytic functionality (e.g., anaerobic digestion pathways in biofuel production). Industrial partnering has demonstrated that EMG data outputs have increased translation rates within this sector, and continued support for the resource will enhance this. There are also many technical developments within this project that will have far reaching impacts and can be applied to other analytical disciplines. For example, the use of workflows and containerisation of software for Cloud compute infrastructures will enable a new level of reproducibility and sharing. We will ensure impact to all academic and industrial audiences by the publication of software, workflows, compute containers and peer reviewed articles. To address the skills shortages in the field of metagenomics informatics, we will also deliver training and webinars. Metagenomics is pivotal to the notion of One Health - the collaborative effort of multiple disciplines working at national and international levels to to attain optimal health for people, animals and the environment. This proposal (and EMG) encapsulates this philosophy, serving the major UK and international communities, and will deliver a cost effective resource that will become the world's leading microbiome data service.
Committee Not funded via Committee
Research TopicsMicrobiology
Research PriorityX – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative Bioinformatics and Biological Resources Fund (BBR) [2007-2015]
Funding SchemeX – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
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