Abstract 5109: National cyberinfrastructure and bioinformatic analysis support available to the cancer research community

2019 
National Center for Genomic Analysis Support (NCGAS) is an NSF-funded center whose goal is to help biologists optimize their bioinformatic pipelines to best address their research questions. To help reach these goals, NCGAS provides a range of services based on the researchers needs. We currently host gateways, Trinity Galaxy and Genepattern, with built-in workflows to support cancer researchers who have little background in command line work. Both these gateways are projects funded by the Information Technologies in Cancer Research (ITCR) program of NIH, NCI, to aid in the genomic and transcriptomic characterization of cancers. NSF-funded researchers comfortable in command line can gain access to IU cyberinfrastructure (HIPAA compliant), to run or develop bioinformatic workflows. Bioinformatic packages are already installed system wide, with reference databases, and new programs are always added upon user’s request. NCGAS is also an ambassador of Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment (XSEDE) resources, providing access to other HIPAA compliant national cyberinfrastructure (Texas Advanced Computing Center, Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center, etc.), available to the entire research community. XSEDE resources include the Jetstream cloud, based at IU and TACC, allowing researchers to use preconfigured virtual machines (VMs) already setup, create custom VM environments for their own work, and to share with classes and collaborators. Data can be transferred and managed between all of these resources securely with already available Globus endpoints which allows transfer for terabytes of data quickly. Additionally, NCGAS hosts workshops to help researchers get started. These training events can be scheduled online or at your local university upon request. NCGAS currently supports projects working on transcriptome, genome-level assembly, phylogenetics, metagenomics, and meta-transcriptomics analysis through providing a range of compute resources that best serve the research project. Citation Format: Bhavya Papudeshi, Carrie Ganote, Sheri Sanders, Thomas G. Doak. National cyberinfrastructure and bioinformatic analysis support available to the cancer research community [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2019; 2019 Mar 29-Apr 3; Atlanta, GA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2019;79(13 Suppl):Abstract nr 5109.
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