Discovering the differences and changes within the genome that
trigger disease is a priority for The Translational Genomics Research
Institute (TGen). To aid the non-profit research institute in their
quest, TGen deployed technology from SGI (NASDAQ:SGIC) to more quickly
analyze molecular profile data sets in their search for cancer cures.
Purchased in April through a National Institute of Health (NIH) grant,
the SGI(R) Altix(R) 4700 will assist TGen researchers in understanding
the genomic variation -- a process which requires comparison searches of
enormous data sets -- that can be rapidly used for diagnosis and
treatment of disease in a manner tailored to individual patients.
TGen selected the SGI Altix 4700 system with over half a terabyte
of shared memory so researchers in the Phoenix, Ariz., institute can
search across multiple chromosomes, all in memory, without having to
break the problems into smaller pieces, enabling researchers to look at
the whole instead of the sum of the parts.
While custom in-house code will be written for these large data
searches, TGen reports that benchmarks were run on the National Center
for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) BLAST (Basic Local Alignment Search
Tool), an algorithm for comparing primary biological sequence
information, ClustalW, a general purpose multiple sequence alignment
program for DNA or proteins, and NAMD, a parallel molecular dynamics
code for large biomolecular systems. Testing resulted in performance
improvements of up to 50 percent on the 64-bit SGI Altix system as
compared to their existing 32-bit system architecture.
"Technology, and microarrays specifically, have allowed the
size of bioinformatics data sets to become so large that it became vital
to acquire a large memory, 64-bit computational infrastructure to be
able to manipulate and analyze those files at the level our researchers
required," said James Lowey, Director of High Performance
Bio-Computing, The Translational Genomics Research Institute.
"Conventional 32-bit computer architectures cannot address memory
above 4GB. This limitation poses sub-optimal analytical approaches due
to the prohibitively protracted computer analysis time needed for
optimal mathematical models and computational algorithms."
The molecular profile datasets being analyzed at TGen cover
malignant myeloma, melanoma, Alzheimer's, autism and pancreatic,
prostate, colon, and breast cancers. With microarrays, each individual
file can be up to 150MB. To search and compare genetic patterns,
researchers take hundreds and hundreds of copies of that individual
file. TGen's code will harness the compute power of the SGI Altix
system's global shared memory to run microarrays, searching for
variations as minute as a change on one protein, trying to determine
what effect that has across the entire spectrum of what is being
observed.
"The success of TGen scientists to date has come at the
sacrifice of time," said Dr. Edward Suh, CIO of TGen.
"However, individuals affected with the disease do not have the
luxury of time. The 64-bit SGI computing system will optimize TGen
researchers' ability to meet their data analysis needs efficiently,
hopefully leading to timely and effective discovery for improved human
health."
The system will be housed at Arizona State University (ASU) in
Tempe, AZ, with operational support provided by ASU's Fulton High
Performance Computing Initiative (HPCI). "The shared memory
capabilities of the new SGI system provide a welcome addition to the HPC
portfolio in Arizona, and will enable researchers at TGen and their
collaborators at ASU to address problems we've been unable to
tackle in the past," said Dan Stanzione, the Director of the Fulton
HPCI.
Purchased through James River Technical, Inc., SGI's
designated partner for higher education and research, and installed in
late May 2007, the SGI Altix 4700 system at TGen is equipped with 576GB
memory and 48 Intel(R) Itanium(R) 2 cores.
"We are very excited about the award of the NIH grant to TGen,
and the subsequent installation of the SGI Altix system", said Tom
Mountcastle, president of James River Technical. "Genomics is a
strategic focus for JRT and SGI and the management and processing of
large data sets and workflow are ideal fits for the Altix 4700. We are
pleased that the system has met the expectations of TGen and we are
proud to be a part of the support infrastructure to facilitate this very
important research that affects all of our lives."
"TGen's use of SGI technology is another example of
SGI's ability to deliver solutions for demanding compute and
data-intensive bioscience workflows," said Deepak Thakkar,
biosciences segment manager for SGI. "The Altix system's
scalability, flexibility and reliability, coupled with its
interoperability, provide the best combination of compute, memory and
I/O elements, matching the diverse needs of the TGen lab
environment."
For more information, visit http://www.sgi.com or call
256/773-2371.
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