£30,000 Boost For UK-China Metabolomics Data Sharing

The UK’s Biotechnology and Biological Research Council has committed £30,000 to support training in managing and sharing metabolomics data and analyses.

AsianScientist (May 22, 2015) – A partnership between the European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI), the Universities of Birmingham, Manchester and Oxford, The Sainsbury Laboratory and TGAC with Beijing Genomics Institute (BGI) and its open-access journal, GigaScience, has received funding from the UK’s Biotechnology and Biological Research Council (BBSRC) to support the sharing of data and analyses in metabolomics.

Metabolomics involves the detection and quantification of small molecules (metabolites) in living organisms using mass spectrometers. The measurements made from these sophisticated instruments are analysed using computational programs to determine the abundances of metabolites, the results of which can provide an indication of an organism’s cellular condition and health.

These data can be stored and shared through public databases such as MetaboLights, which launched in 2012. However, data sharing is not yet keeping pace with the publication of scientific papers in Metabolomics.

“There is already a lot of commitment in metabolomics research community to data sharing and reuse—our main challenge is simply in training people how best to incorporate this into their regular working practices,” said Dr. Christoph Steinbeck of EMBL-EBI.

“The BBSRC has recognized that this area of molecular biology is growing more quickly than any other and that we need to do everything we can to train and support scientists in sharing data. That will lead to better quality data, more efficient research and shorter time to discovery.”

The award of £30,000 from the BBSRC will enable the consortium to host training workshops to support scientists in the UK and China in managing and sharing their metabolomics data and analyses. Such computational skills have been highlighted by the BBSRC as being essential for furthering the impact of science on society and the economy.

The consortium will work with Software Carpentry, Data Carpentry, ELIXIR and the Galaxy Project: four international networks dedicated to building computational and bioinformatics skills capacity.

“This funding will enable a synergistic exchange of our experience in data curation and publication with the expertise in metabolomics teaching provided by our UK-based partners,” said Dr. Peter Li, data organization manager at GigaScience.

“Bioinformatics education is of great interest to BGI as a channel of communicating how science can be performed in an open manner which we are promoting in GigaScience.”

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Source: GigaScience.
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