Boston
-- Sun Microsystems is teaming up with seven universities in
North Carolina
to aid research into the building blocks of life.
On Tuesday, Sun announced that it was forming the Sun North Carolina Research Triangle Center of Excellence (COE) in Bioinformatics
and Computational Biology.
Through the COE, Sun and its partner companies will provide computing hardware, software, and services to academic researchers
working in the fields of genomics and proteomics, according to the statement.
Genomics is a field concerned with mapping, sequencing, and analyzing an organism’s complete set of DNA, or "genome."
Proteomics studies proteomes (the protein complement to genomes) in an effort to understand biologic processes, helping to
understand disease processes at the molecular level, for example.
Sun's support will be in the form of discounts on the company's hardware and software, according to Stefan Unger, business
development manager for computational biology at Sun.
The total value of the hardware, software and services from Sun will be approximately $6 million, according to Sun.
The goal of the COE is to provide better research tools and training for researchers in those fields. The COE also has the
goal of developing a distributed computing environment to facilitate collaboration between the universities and corporations
in the COE, according to Sun.
The new Sun initiative will operate as a "virtual
Center of
Excellence
," encouraging collaboration between the participating universities and business partners, but not consolidating computing
resources in one location, according to Sun.
The close proximity of the members made a separate COE site unnecessary, according to Unger.
"We had a high number of really good schools in a relatively tight and consistent area," Unger said.
The COE will encourage collaboration between the member organizations by coordinating meetings, holding events, and co-sponsoring
scientific meetings, according to Unger.
However, details of how the universities will actually share information were not available, and may have to wait for the
completion of a larger project to develop a regional computing grid, BioGRID, for use by the researchers.
"We're not claiming that this is going to be the thing that brings everybody into one big happy family. The emphasis of the
COE is on research and researchers," Unger said.
Among the institutions that will take part in the COE are Duke University, North Carolina State University (NCSU), and the
University of North Carolina (UNC).
Sun will work with each institution in the COE to provide the necessary computing resources.
Duke's Institute for Genome Sciences and Policy will use Sun equipment to study the genetic and epidemiological basis of human
disease. Sun hardware will also be used in a lab for research into bioinformatics and computational biology.
UNC will use Sun equipment in its
Carolina
Center
for Genome Sciences. The university is working to provide data resources and bioinformatics analysis tools to biomedical
researchers around the world.
In addition to Sun, the COE will be helped by Incellico, which sells knowledge management technology used in pharmaceutical research. Incellico's CELL product, which runs on Sun's Solaris operating system, will be provided as a commercial service to Sun COE members.
SAS Institute will work with COE members to develop methods to analyze genomic and proteomic data, according to Sun.
Also involved in the COE is the
North Carolina
Supercomputing
Center
, which will provide high-performance computing resources while also playing a key role in the development of the BioGRID.
The North Carolina Genomics and Bioinformatics Consortium will help coordinate the activities of COE members, according to
Unger.
The new Research Triangle COE is one of 30 that Sun sponsors, according to Unger, who said that Sun is "on a roll" in the
area of bioinformatics.
"They provide us with a reference site and strong partners that develop top-notch solutions in various market segments," he
said.
COE customers are developing extensions to Sun's technology and are a fertile test bed for Sun's products.
"It's a win-win," said Unger.