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A
bold new initiative is needed to train a new generation of computational
biologists who are equally at home in wet bench science and the world
of computational science.
Terrence Sejnowski
Dear
President Bush:
A new
branch of science is emerging that will have a far-reaching impact on
the economy of the United States, with applications to medicine, agriculture
and defense that will be revolutionary.
The discovery
that DNA carries the genetic code for cells opened a new era in biology
that focused on the organization of information in cells. Soon we will
know all the genes in cells from humans and many other species and high
throughput methods are available to identify proteins and to analyze
their three dimensional structures. However, the sequence of a genome
only provides the equivalent of nature's white pages, a useful index
of genes but far less than we need in order to know how cells work.
At present
researchers are creating a list functions for those genes in different
cell, which is equivalent to nature's yellow pages. But even this is
not enough to know how organisms are built since the genes encode a
program that is used during development to create a wide range of different
cells and organs.
We need
a new approach to these problems that uses all of the tools in molecular
genetics and in addition brings to bear powerful computational tools
from computer science. Although we have the tools and techniques to
make major discoveries, we do not have enough scientists, trained at
the interface between biology and computer science, to make them.
A bold
new initiative is needed to train a new generation of computational
biologists who are equally at home in wet bench science and the world
of computational science. A new national institute should be initiated
at the National Institutes of Health devoted to the goal of discovering
broad general theoretical principles for how biological systems become
self organized into functional systems.
For example,
we can anticipate that general principles will emerge from the study
of how various proteins and macromolecular complexes in cells interact
with each other and control gene expression. The potential payoff for
establishing these general principles is enormous. The Institute for
Computational Biology and Medicine will be a resource for the entire
nation, focusing existing talent and creating the computational infrastructure
needed to make major advances.
Sincerely,
Terrence
Sejnowski
Computational Neuroscientist
Professor, Salk Institute; Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute;
Professor of Biology and Neurosciences, University of California, San
Diego;
Coauthor of The Computational Brain and most recently (with Steven
Quartz) Liars, Lovers, and Heroes: What the New Brain Science Reveals
About How We Become Who We Are. |