Background: The rapid evolution of Internet technologies and the collaborative approaches that dominate the field have stimulated the development of numerous bioinformatics resources. To address this new framework, several initiatives have tried to organize these services and resources. In this paper, we present the BioInformatics Resource Inventory (BIRI), a new approach for automatically discovering and indexing available public bioinformatics resources using information extracted from the scientific literature. The index generated can be automatically updated by adding additional manuscripts describing new resources. We have developed web services and applications to test and validate our approach. It has not been designed to replace current indexes but to extend their capabilities with richer functionalities.
The Human Genome Project and the explosion of high-throughput data have transformed the areas of molecular and personalized medicine, which are producing a wide range of studies and experimental results and providing new insights for developing medical applications. Research in many interdisciplinary fields is resulting in data repositories and computational tools that support a wide diversity of tasks: genome sequencing, genome-wide association studies, analysis of genotype-phenotype interactions, drug toxicity and side effects assessment, prediction of protein interactions and diseases, development of computational models, biomarker discovery, and many others. The authors of the present paper have developed several inventories covering tools, initiatives and studies in different computational fields related to molecular medicine: medical informatics, bioinformatics, clinical informatics and nanoinformatics. With these inventories, created by mining the scientific literature, we have carried out several reviews of these fields, providing researchers with a useful framework to locate, discover, search and integrate resources. In this paper we present an analysis of the state-of-the-art as it relates to computational resources for molecular medicine, based on results compiled in our inventories, as well as results extracted from a systematic review of the literature and other scientific media. The present review is based on the impact of their related publications and the available data and software resources for molecular medicine. It aims to provide information that can be useful to support ongoing research and work to improve diagnostics and therapeutics based on molecular-level insights.
Nanoinformatics has recently emerged to address the need of computing
applications at the nano level. In this regard, the authors have participated in
various initiatives to identify its concepts, foundations and challenges. While
nanomaterials open up the possibility for developing new devices in many
industrial and scientific areas, they also offer breakthrough perspectives for
the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of diseases. In this paper, we analyze
the different aspects of nanoinformatics and suggest five research topics to
help catalyze new research and development in the area, particularly focused on
nanomedicine. We also encompass the use of informatics to further the biological
and clinical applications of basic research in nanoscience and nanotechnology,
and the related concept of an extended “nanotype” to coalesce
information related to nanoparticles. We suggest how nanoinformatics could
accelerate developments in nanomedicine, similarly to what happened with the
Human Genome and other –omics projects, on issues like exchanging
modeling and simulation methods and tools, linking toxicity information to
clinical and personal databases or developing new approaches for scientific
ontologies, among many others.
The training activities undertaken in INFOBIOMED have contributed to a multi-disciplinary BMI approach. It is our hope that this work might provide an impetus for training efforts in Europe, and yield a new generation of biomedical informaticians.
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