DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
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reference
Notice: Directions on the Use of IIPS, Tailored to the Office of Science, are available at Instructions on the Use of IIPS Click Here to Access Electronic Submission Instructions and Forms For more information about the Office of Science Grant Program, go to the Office of Science Grants and Contracts Web Site.
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Notice 03-05
Genomes to Life Department of Energy Office of Science Financial Assistance Program Notice 03-05: Genomes to Life AGENCY: U.S. Department of Energy ACTION: Notice inviting grant applications. SUMMARY:The Office of Biological and Environmental Research (OBER) and the Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research (ASCR) of the Office of Science (SC), U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), hereby announce their interest in receiving applications for research in the following areas that support the Genomes to Life research program (http://www.doegenomestolife.org/):
2) Technologies for the high-throughput synthesis of proteins and their biological characterization; 3) Molecular tags to identify individual proteins and to characterize multi-protein complexes in microbial cells; 4) High resolution, quantitative microbial biochemistry; 5) New genomic strategies and technologies for studying complex microbial communities; 6) Pathway inference in prokaryotes; 7) Implications for society, the law, education, and technology transfer; and 8) Other novel and innovative technologies and research strategies to address the core goals of the Genomes to Life research program. DATES: Statements of intent to apply, including information on collaborators, areas of proposed research and technology development, and a short (one page) summary of the proposed research should be submitted by Tuesday, January 7, 2003. Formal research applications are due by 4:30 PM E.D.T. Tuesday, April 22, 2003. ADDRESS: Statements of intent to apply should be sent to Ms. Joanne Corcoran by E-mail at: joanne.corcoran@science.doe.gov with copies to Dr. David Thomassen at: david.thomassen@science.doe.gov and Dr. Gary Johnson at: gary.johnson@science.doe.gov. Formal applications in response to this solicitation are to be electronically submitted by an authorized institutional business official through DOE's Industry Interactive Procurement System (IIPS) at: http://e-center.doe.gov/. IIPS provides for the posting of solicitations and receipt of applications in a paperless environment via the Internet. In order to submit applications through IIPS your business official will need to register at the IIPS website. The Office of Science will include attachments as part of this notice that provide the appropriate forms in PDF fillable format that are to be submitted through IIPS. Color images should be submitted in IIPS as a separate file in PDF format and identified as such. These images should be kept to a minimum due to the limitations of reproducing them. They should be numbered and referred to in the body of the technical scientific application as Color image 1, Color image 2, etc. Questions regarding the operation of IIPS may be E-mailed to the IIPS Help Desk at: HelpDesk@pr.doe.gov or you may call the help desk at: (800) 683-0751. Further information on the use of IIPS by the Office of Science is available at: http://www.science.doe.gov/production/grants/grants.html. If you are unable to submit an application through IIPS please contact the Grants and Contracts Division, Office of Science at: (301) 903-5212 in order to gain assistance for submission through IIPS or to receive special approval and instructions on how to submit printed applications. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr. David Thomassen, telephone: (301) 903- 9817, E-mail: david.thomassen@science.doe.gov, Office of Biological and Environmental Research, SC-72/Germantown Building; U.S. Department of Energy; 1000 Independence Avenue, SW; Washington, DC 20585-1290. A complementary request for proposals from DOE national laboratories has been issued, Program Solicitation LAB 03-05. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Biology has entered a new era - the era of systems biology - in which we will understand entire living organisms and their interactions with the environment. While scientists have long tried to understand the workings of individual genes or small groups of genes this new era in biology will focus research on entire networks of genes and even entire biological systems - small, single celled organisms at first and later more complex creatures ultimately including humans. This dramatic advance is possible, in large part, because of the scientific and technical successes of the Human Genome Project. The information and technology now available to all scientists on the human genome and on a rapidly growing list of the genomes of other organisms from microbes to plants to worms to mice not only gives us new perspectives on the inner workings of biological systems but provides new opportunities to use this knowledge to solve problems in energy. The Genomes to Life program is a systems biology research program that offers the possibility of biotechnology solutions that can give us abundant sources of clean energy yet control greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide, a key factor in global climate change, and that can help us clean up past contamination of the environment. The overall goals of the Genomes to Life program include understanding:
2. Complex networks that control the assembly and operation of these machines. 3. The organization and biochemical capabilities of complex microbial communities.
The Genomes to Life program supports a combination of large, well integrated, multidisciplinary research teams and smaller, focused research projects. This solicitation will support smaller, focused research projects to develop new technologies, research strategies, or research resources needed by the Genomes to Life program. Future solicitations will likely request applications for both large, well integrated, multidisciplinary research teams and smaller, focused research projects. Information on the research projects currently funded by the Genomes to Life program and a description of project goals and overall program organization can be found at: http://www.doegenomestolife.org/. Other useful web sites include: Microbial Genome Program Home Page - http://www.sc.doe.gov/ober/microbial.html DOE Joint Genome Institute Microbial Web Page - http://www.jgi.doe.gov/JGI_microbial/html/ Microbes of Interest to DOE. The initial focus of Genomes to Life is on microbes (including fungi) directly relevant to DOE mission needs in energy (cleaner energy, biomass conversion, carbon sequestration) or the environment (cleanup of metals and radionuclides at DOE sites). Research in Goals 1 and 2 takes advantage of and focuses on microbes whose complete DNA sequence is already known. Research in Goal 3 focuses on microbes or microbial communities of interest to, directly relevant to, or that will contribute substantially to an ability to address DOE mission needs. Selected, well-justified research using yeast is appropriate as a means of quickly generating data that addresses the needs of the Genomes to Life Program. However, the use of yeast as a long-term research focus will not be encouraged. Data and Other Results. Any data and results generated through the investigations into Goals 1 through 4 that are appropriate to share with the broader community should be provided in timely, open, and machine-readable format where possible or appropriate. Microbial DNA sequence data will be publicly released according to the "Data Release Requirements: Microbial Genome Sequencing Projects" ( http://www.sc.doe.gov/production/ober/EPR/data.html). Software Development and Distribution. Software developed by research teams that is appropriate for distribution beyond the research team shall be made available to the biological and computational community. It is our intent that this software be accessible, useful, affordable, and interoperable with other software and with data. Applications should include plans for assuring availability, stating whether: the software will be available as binary or source code, a fee will be charged for the use of the software, some users (e.g., commercial) will be charged while others not, in what way derivative products will be treated, etc. Statements such as that by the International Society for Computational Biology on Bioinformatics Software Availability, http://www.iscb.org/pr.shtml, may be used for reference. Research Focus (1) Technologies and strategies to image individual proteins and multi protein complexes in microbes and to image complex microbial communities. This solicitation will promote the development of imaging technology (probes, instrumentation and computational methodology) needed to accomplish the Genomes to Life program goals. Applications or development of imaging technology should be directed to or easily adapted to the study of microbes. Development of probes and instrumentation should be complementary to and facilitate completion of Genomes to Life program goals, including currently funded projects (see currently funded projects at: http://www.doegenomestolife.org/). Additional information on the projected imaging needs of the Genomes to Life program can be found at: http://www.doegenomestolife.org/technology/imaging/GTLimaging2002.pdf. Specific research needs include:
(2) Technologies for the high-throughput synthesis of proteins and their biophysical characterization. This solicitation seeks to promote the development of techniques and protocols for high- throughput, low-cost synthesis of full-length proteins directly from coding sequence and for their subsequent biophysical characterization. Availability of proteins will enable the production and confirmation of selective probes and molecular tags needed to address the broad goals of the Genomes to Life program. An essential early requirement for turning genome information into biological understanding is having access to purified samples of at least the majority of proteins encoded in the genomes of interest. Even within the microbial-focus of Genomes to Life, this requirement is daunting. It must encompass, within the next decade, hundreds of different microbes and therefore many tens of thousands of proteins. Both the production and characterization goals are significantly broader than those of structural genomics programs. In those programs the goals are limited to the structural characterization of a relatively small fraction of proteins, and often protein fragments, that represent structurally novel motifs. It is recognized that no satisfactory general approach currently exists and that not all proteins will likely yield to the same techniques. It is expected that a variety of both cell-free and cell- based systems will be required, as well as multiple characterization methods. Production and characterization technologies should be scalable, economic, and sufficiently robust to meet the production goal of milligram quantities of approximately 10,000 proteins per year. An essential early need is the development of improved techniques for predicting from sequence what production and purification approaches are most likely to succeed with each protein. Thus, informatics is an integral component. Algorithms based on data from successful and failed protein expressions are expected to substantially inform and improve future protein production efficiency. Informatics coupled with biophysical characterizations are expected to provide functional insights that may also explain why such a large number of biologically important, full-length proteins either can not be expressed in soluble form, or have structures that cannot be determined once expressed. These proteins may include substantial disordered regions that adopt structures only after interaction with appropriate protein binding partners. Reliable predictive algorithms based on expression and characterization databases are therefore needed to predict disorder and binding partners. Areas in which improvements are sought include:
High-throughput, economical approaches for characterizing synthesized protein to assess product quality and to predict protein function are also solicited. A goal is to provide multiple benchmark biophysical characterizations for each protein under several conditions. These approaches are expected to include:
(3) Molecular tags to identify individual proteins and to characterize multi-protein complexes in microbial cells. This solicitation seeks advances in technology needed to mass-produce molecular tags for proteins and protein complexes as tools to be used for determining function. As a top priority, technologies are sought for mass-producing specific protein recognition tags capable of functioning as:
These technologies must be scalable to permit tens of thousands of successful tags to be produced and characterized per year at affordable costs. It is recognized that none of the many approaches under development to address this problem have yet demonstrated compelling promise - even as generally effective laboratory-scale methods. Yet for the purposes of Genomes to Life and for modern biology altogether, very high-throughput, industrially robust methods to address this problem are required. For the purposes of this solicitation, it is assumed that purified protein 'targets' will be provided to the researchers in micro-gram to milli-gram quantities so that tags can be optimized and characterized. Tags that interfere with function as well as those that do not interfere with protein function are both needed to help better define the biological roles of proteins. Areas in which technological improvements are sought include:
(4) High resolution, quantitative microbial biochemistry. As noted above, the initial focus of Genomes to Life is on microbes (including fungi) directly relevant to DOE mission needs in energy (cleaner energy, biomass conversion, carbon sequestration) or the environment (cleanup of metals and radionuclides at DOE sites). To this end, development of novel technologies are encouraged to support the characterization of the internal environment and organization of prokaryotic microbes relevant to DOE missions and the Genomes to Life program and to explore how the characteristics of a microbe's internal environment affect its metabolism and physiology. Very little is known of the internal "milieu" of any cell. A microbial cell is not likely to be a "bag of dilute salt water" within which metabolites and gene products freely diffuse. There is internal organization due to structural cytoskeletal components, partitioning of gene products in different parts of the cell so that they can efficiently mediate their appropriate pathways, concentration gradients of proteins and small molecules across the volume of the cell, and physical effects caused by the cell membrane and intracellular constituents including the viscosity of a cell's cytoplasm. A protein's localization within a cell, its relationships with other proteins, concentrations, and subcellular dynamics are critically important parameters in determining its function, for identifying functional networks of proteins in a morphological context, and for expanding our understanding of whole-cell function. Thus, studies on the topological, physical, and chemical properties of cellular cytoplasm, their effects on protein dynamics, on flux rates of metabolites, on protein-protein and protein-ligand interactions, and ultimately, on protein function are needed. Research is needed that furnishes information on the dynamic behavior of these various molecules as the "molecular machines" perform their functions and on the distribution, localization, movement, and temporal variations of the molecules and complexes inside individual microbes as they carry out reactions of relevance to DOE missions and the Genomes to Life Program. Research is also needed to characterize topological, physical, and chemical characteristics underlying cellular responses to external stimuli, e.g., nutrients, toxins, or changes in environmental conditions. Similarly, computational algorithms designed to recognize regulatory networks or patterns of gene expression under different circumstances are needed that can provide insights into co-regulated genes. New methods that accomplish any of several aims are solicited:
(5) New genomic strategies and technologies for studying complex microbial communities. Microorganisms are the largest reservoir of genetic and biochemical diversity on earth. New methods for examining microbial communities have revealed that uncultured microbes make up more than 99% of many natural microbial communities. DNA isolated directly from environmental samples is a tremendous resource for examining the structure and function of microbial communities. The science of microbial ecology will be advanced by understanding the distribution, diversity, relative abundance, and interactions of the microorganisms in these communities. A goal of the Genomes to Life Program (Goal 3) is to dramatically extend current scientific and technical understanding of the genetic diversity and metabolic capabilities of microbial communities in the environment, especially those related to remediation, biogeochemical cycles, climate changes, energy production, and biotechnology. A challenge to achieving this objective, however, is the difficulty in characterizing the complexity of microbial communities in nature. For example, it has been estimated that there may be thousands of different species in surface soils. Thus, new strategies and technologies are needed to help define and assess the repertoire of metabolic capabilities as embodied in the collective community's genomic sequence. We need new technologies that enable us to:
Key technologies needed to achieve these goals include, but are not limited to:
In addition, there are many computational challenges to characterizing the composition and functional capabilities of microbial communities. New algorithms for DNA sequence assembly and annotation will be required to analyze the multiorganism sequence data, and new modeling methods will be required to predict the behavior of microbial communities. Computational methods needed include the ability to deconvolute mixtures of partial genomes sampled in the environment and to identify individual organisms; to facilitate multiple-organism shotgun- sequence assembly; to improve comparative approaches to microbial sequence annotation and gene finding; to reconstruct pathways from sequenced or partially sequenced genomes; and to evaluate the combined metabolic capabilities of heterogeneous microbial populations. Importantly, computational methods are needed to correlate genomic, physiological, and biogeochemical site parameters, as well as their spatial and temporal distribution. Finally, methods to integrate regulatory-network, pathway, and expression data into integrated models of microbial community function are needed. (6) Pathway Inference in Prokaryotes. Many of the future solutions to the problems of supplying energy without net greenhouse gas emissions, managing the atmosphere's carbon budget, and remediating environmental contamination from metals, radionuclides, and toxic chemicals, will be based on biotechnology. Most of the new biotechnologies will almost certainly arise from fundamental advances in our understanding the 'microbial world'. This is primarily due to two facts. First, the metabolism of naturally occurring microorganisms plays a major role, often a dominant one, in many of the key chemical and energy fluxes of the planet. Second, virtually all of the biochemical transformations needed for safe energy production, carbon management, and environmental cleanup are part of the natural repertoire of one or more microorganisms. The challenge therefore is to explore and understand the immense chemical processing power that the microbial world possesses and uses. Achieving the needed understanding will require a nearly complete predictive mastery of the microbial cell from a 'systems' point of view - including their metabolic and signaling pathways, their regulatory networks, their material and energy flow constraints, etc. Data sets of considerable size and complexity must be obtained, managed, and mined. In addition, entirely new realms of modeling and simulation must be mastered. The research requested in this section builds on advances in both computation and data base management as well as the extraordinary increase in the speed and capacity - and a corresponding reduction in the cost - of genome sequencing. Most fundamentally, it builds on the new and massive investment in the systems-level genomic-style study of microbial cells and microbial communities being undertaken as part of the Genomes to Life initiative. The research requested in this section will facilitate the use of data obtained from the genomic and 'systems-level' experimental study of microbes (primarily prokaryotes) and microbial communities. It will in particular assist in using these data to predict the role played by each of the proteins encoded in the microbe's genome, the microbe's signaling and metabolic pathways, its regulatory mechanisms, and its biochemical capacities. This research will help enable the re- annotation of incorrectly annotated genomes, the prediction of functions for unknown genes, and discovery of known functions for which no genes have been identified. Biochemical capacities with direct relevance to DOE missions, such as energy production, carbon fixation, bioremediation, etc. are of particular interest. Pathway Inference: Information on regulatory, metabolic, and signaling pathways in prokaryotes is growing rapidly. Just as the use of similarity searches, such as Basic Local Alignment Search Tool, across genomes of multiple organisms has provided extraordinarily useful information regarding the imputed function of the target gene sequences, the research requested in this section is intended to facilitate similar inferences through probes of pathways in other organisms, primarily microbes. Although, some new knowledge may be required experimentally, the emphasis is on providing a computational infrastructure for this homology searching. Investigators may propose the construction of specific databases, research on knowledge representation, and/or tools to measure similarity or provide inference. Any proposed databases should contain references to the source of the data, including measures of presumed accuracy, based partly on whether annotations were derived from experimental results or computational analogy. Research may be proposed on data structures and data access tools for the integrative storage of pathway, signaling, and regulation information needed to support 'knowledge' extraction and in particular the computation of inferences about pathway structure and function. This goal presents questions concerning the types of data that should be stored and how they are to be interrelated, queried, presented, etc. Research also may be proposed to develop tools and resources that will support computational methods for inferring the existence and function of signaling, regulatory, and metabolic pathways. The research in this element initially may be conducted on organisms chosen for their utility to the research rather than for their importance to DOE, but the proposed research should show that it will be transferable to prokaryotes and pathways of DOE interest. (7) Implications for Society, the Law, Education, and Technology Transfer. Scientific research takes place in a context of ongoing societal concerns and expectations. Headlines about DNA, genes, and the new powers of science to analyze and manipulate fundamental elements of life vie for our attention daily. The dazzling diversity of applications of DNA science to fields ranging from medicine and agriculture to forensics and environmental restoration are having and will continue to have profound impacts on society and the lives of our citizenry. Many recent discoveries stem from data and tools generated by the Human Genome Project, whose goal is to describe in intricate detail the DNA from humans and other selected organisms by 2003. DNA is the information molecule that carries instructions for creating and maintaining all life. Resources and analytical technologies generated by the Human Genome Project and other genetic research can be applied to the DNA of all other organisms including those that are currently centerpieces of Genome to Life research. Thus, it is important for the Genomes to Life program to address some of the ethical, legal, and social issues that may arise from the project. The Genomes to Life program initially focuses on nonpathogenic microbes of environmental importance and those that have potential to address DOE missions such as bioremediation, energy production, global climate change processes and biotechnology. To this end, research is solicited into the Implications for Society, the Law, Education, and Technology Transfer from the research being conducted under the Genomes to Life program. Investigations are encouraged that focus on:
The scope of research on the Implications for Society, the Law, Economics and Education is a work in progress and emphases will evolve as opportunities are identified to explore the consequences of Genomes to Life science for society. (8) Other novel and innovative technologies and research strategies to address the core goals of the Genomes to Life research program. Many different technologies, research strategies, and data resources will be required to successfully address the core goals of the Genomes to Life program. Applications will be accepted that propose to develop additional tools, research strategies, or resources that will help speed success in reaching the core goals of the Genomes to Life program. In most cases, these new technologies and research strategies should be scalable and automatable for genome-scale analyses. A strategy for or demonstration of scalability and automatability should be described. The relevance to Genomes to Life goals should be clearly described. Program Funding Up to $10 million is available in Fiscal Year 2003, contingent upon availability of appropriated funds. It is anticipated that individual research grants will be funded at a level of $250,000 to $1,000,000 per year. Merit and Relevance Review Applications will be subjected to scientific merit review (peer review) and will be evaluated against the following evaluation criteria listed in descending order of importance as codified at 10 CFR 605.10(d):
2. Appropriateness of the Proposed Method or Approach; 3. Competency of Applicant's Personnel and Adequacy of Proposed Resources; 4. Reasonableness and Appropriateness of the Proposed Budget. The evaluation will include program policy factors such as the relevance of the proposed research to the terms of the announcement and the Department's programmatic needs. External peer reviewers are selected with regard to both their scientific expertise and the absence of conflict-of-interest issues. Non-federal reviewers may be used, and submission of an application constitutes agreement that this is acceptable to the investigator(s) and the submitting institution. Applications Information about the development and submission of applications, eligibility, limitations, evaluation, selection process, and other policies and procedures may be found in the Application Guide for the Office of Science Financial Assistance Program and 10 CFR Part 605. Electronic access to the Guide and required forms is made available via the World Wide Web at: http://www.science.doe.gov/production/grants/grants.html. DOE is under no obligation to pay for any costs associated with the preparation or submission of applications if an award is not made. The application must contain an abstract or project summary, letters of intent from collaborators, and short curriculum vitas consistent with NIH guidelines for all Principal and co-Principal Investigators. Adherence to type size and line spacing requirements is necessary for several reasons. No applicants should have the advantage, or by using small type, of providing more text in their applications. Small type may also make it difficult for reviewers to read the application. Applications must have 1-inch margins at the top, bottom, and on each side. Type sizes must be 10 point or larger. Line spacing is at the discretion of the applicant but there must be no more than 6 lines per vertical inch of text. Pages should be standard 8 1/2" x 11" (or metric A4, i.e., 210 mm x 297 mm). As noted above, color images should be submitted in IIPS as a separate file in PDF format and identified as such. These images should be kept to a minimum due to the limitations of reproducing them. They should be numbered and referred to in the body of the technical scientific application as Color image 1, Color image 2, etc. Applicants are expected to use the following ordered format to prepare Applications in addition to following instructions in the Application Guide for the Office of Science Financial Assistance Program. Applications must be written in English, with all budgets in U.S. dollars.
The Office of Science, as part of its grant regulations, requires at 10 CFR 605.11(b) that a recipient receiving a grant to perform research involving recombinant DNA molecules and/or organisms and viruses containing recombinant DNA molecules shall comply with the National Institutes of Health "Guidelines for Research Involving Recombinant DNA Molecules", which is available via the world wide web at: http://www.niehs.nih.gov/odhsb/biosafe/nih/rdna-apr98.pdf, (59 FR 34496, July 5, 1994), or such later revision of those guidelines as may be published in the Federal Register. DOE policy requires that potential applicants adhere to 10 CFR Part 745 "Protection of Human Subjects" (if applicable), or such later revision of those guidelines as may be published in the Federal Register. The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Number for this program is 81.049, and the solicitation control number is ERFAP 10 CFR Part 605.
Ralph H. De Lorenzo Published in the Federal Register November 15, 2002, Volume 67, Number 221, Pages 69208-69214.
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