St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tenn., has
joined the ranks of world-class supercomputer users around the world
with the installation of an IBM computer system that can perform more
than 600-billion operations per second.
The supercomputer, an IBM eServer(R) BladeCenter(TM), which is
equivalent to 280 servers working at once, puts St. Jude in 251st place
among the top 500 supercomputer users in the world, according to Clayton
W. Naeve, Ph.D., chief research information officer and director of the
St. Jude Hartwell Center for Bioinformatics and Biotechnology.
St. Jude is the only children's hospital to make the list,
which is compiled twice annually by supercomputing experts from the
University of Mannheim, Germany, the University of Tennessee, and
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (http://www.top500.org).
"St. Jude is now in the same arena as major computer centers
operated by governments, major corporations, communications corporations
and physics research centers around the world," Naeve said.
St. Jude will use this enormous computing capacity to accelerate
medical research to find preventions, cures and new treatment options
for catastrophic diseases in children, such as cancers, acquired and
inherited immunodeficiencies and genetic disorders.
The supercomputer, a Linux cluster, permits many projects to be
completed quickly at the same time, or one very large project to be
completed quickly, according to Pat Ford, the supercomputer
facility's operations director.
"Many of the important questions being asked by our
researchers require enormous computing power to handle hundreds of
thousands of pieces of data or to generate images of important
biological molecules to study how they work in the body," Ford
said. "The supercomputer will significantly speed research designed
to save lives by reducing the time it takes for our scientists to move
from data collection to discovery of important new findings."
"The Hartwell Center is dedicated to research that will
benefit children, and in the long run, the research will benefit all
people who suffer from some of the same catastrophic diseases that
threaten children around the world," Naeve said. "In that
sense, although this is a St. Jude resource, it will produce knowledge
that will be a resource for the entire world."
"Our goal is to help St. Jude use information technology to
quicken the pace of clinical research into children's
diseases," said James Coffin, Ph.D., vice president, IBM Life
Sciences. "The selection of the right technology was very important
to St. Jude because of the complexity of the projects and the volume of
data that researchers are dealing with in their investigations. We are
very pleased that they chose IBM's BladeCenter for their computing
needs."
One of the St. Jude projects uses the new computing power to study
the motion of enzyme molecules in order to determine how these proteins
work, and how mutations in them change or destroy their ability to do
their jobs, Naeve said. Enzymes are large proteins that control the
speed of specific biochemical reactions in the body. Many diseases are
caused by malfunctioning enzymes.
"Shape is everything to a protein," Naeve said.
"Mutations that change a protein's shape can derail the
protein's function and disrupt the normal function of the cell. And
the shape of a potential drug molecule determines whether it will
interact properly with its target in the body."
A second project that has benefited from the supercomputer is the
study of the flexibility of a tumor suppressor protein called p27, and
how the flexibility affects the protein's function. The
supercomputer cut computation time from 200 hours to just 20.
Another project that is benefiting from the supercomputer is a
study that screens various molecules to determine if they might be
effective drugs against certain diseases.
"This is an extremely exciting time to be working at St.
Jude," Ford said. "The more experience we gain with our
supercomputer, the more effectively we'll be able to use it, and
the more rapidly we'll find cures for catastrophic diseases."
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital is internationally
recognized for its pioneering work in finding cures and saving children
with cancer and other catastrophic diseases. Founded by late entertainer
Danny Thomas and based in Memphis, Tennessee, St. Jude freely shares its
discoveries with scientific and medical communities around the world. No
family ever pays for treatments not covered by insurance, and families
without insurance are never asked to pay. St. Jude is financially
supported by ALSAC, its fundraising organization.
For more information, visit http://www.stjude.org or call
901/495-5118 or 914/766-4728.
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