Call for Papers and
Participation
Computational
Approaches to Metabolomics
At the Pacific Symposium on
Biocomputing 2007
January 3-7, 2007
Grand Wailea,
The goal of this session is to discuss the latest
progress in the study of metabolomics – the study of small molecules found in or produced by an organism
(http://www.metabolomics.ca) – using bioinformatics
tools.
Metabolomics, or metabolic profiling,
is an emerging branch of health research that uses metabolites as very sensitive
reporters to detect tiny changes or mutations that happen to genes or proteins,
monitor and/or measure the larger-scale physiological changes that occur in
response to subtle changes in the environment, and assist in the improved
monitoring of adverse drug reactions. Indeed, metabolomics is increasingly being
used in a variety of health applications including pharmacology, pre-clinical
drug trials, toxicology, transplant monitoring, newborn screening and clinical
chemistry using highly automated and high-throughput
platforms.
Tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS), capillary
electrophoresis (CE), Fourier transform MS (FT-MS), infrared spectroscopy (FTIR)
and NMR spectroscopy are all used in metabolic profiling. These technological
developments are complemented by a trend to use more sophisticated computer
techniques to process or deconvolve chromatographic, spectroscopic or
spectrometric data. These instruments generate so much data so quickly, that it
is important to develop software tools for data reduction, data visualization,
data classification and analysis. Machine learning tools like Bayesian
classifiers, decision trees, support vector machines and various types of Markov
networks will need to be constructed and trained to both to produce classifiers
of disease state and stage as well as identify genetic disease markers. In
addition, the metabolomics community needs software tools that will analyze
known biochemical pathway data (from existing resources such as KEGG, PUMA, WIT)
for various functions, including ways to predict candidate gene mutations or
disruptions on the basis of metabolite
abundances.
Possible
Topics
Papers addressing any of the
mentioned topics (or other related topics) are welcome. The session is
especially interested in new
methods for analyzing multiple types of experimental data and is not
limited to a specific technological platform.
Session
co-chairs
Russ
Greiner
General
Information on PSB
The
Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing (PSB) 2007 is an international,
multidisciplinary conference for the presentation and discussion of current
research in the theory and application of computational methods in problems of
biological significance. Papers and presentations are rigorously peer reviewed
and are published in an archival proceedings volume. PSB 2007 will be held
January 3-7, 2007 at the Grand Wailea in Wailea,
The PSB has been designed to be
responsive to the need for critical mass in sub-disciplines within Biocomputing.
For that reason, it is the only meeting whose sessions are defined dynamically
each year in response to specific proposals. PSB sessions are organized by
leaders in the emerging areas and targeted to provide a forum for publication
and discussion of research in Biocomputing "hot topics." In this way, PSB
provides an early forum for serious examination of emerging methods and
approaches in this rapidly changing field. More information on the conference can be obtained
from the conference Web page: http://psb.stanford.edu/.
Important
Dates
Submission
Information
The
conference is focused on rigorously peer-reviewed full-length papers on original
research. The accepted manuscripts will be published in a bound archival
proceeding, available online via the PSB website, and referenced in online
sources such as PubMed. The best of the papers will be accepted for oral
presentation to the entire conference. A poster session is available for
researchers who wish to present their work without official
publication.
All
papers must be submitted to psb-submit @ helix.stanford.edu in
electronic format. Only files in one of two formats are acceptable: postscript
(*.ps) or Adobe Acrobat (*.pdf). Attached files should
be named with the first author’s last name (e.g., altman.pdf). Hardcopy
submission or unprocessed
Each paper must be accompanied by a
cover letter with the following information:
Submitted papers are limited to twelve (12) pages in
the official PSB publication format. Please format your paper according to these
instructions, which can be found at http://psb.stanford.edu/psb-online/psb-submit/.
If figures cannot be easily resized and placed precisely in the text, then it
should be clear that with appropriate modifications, the total manuscript length
would be within the page limit.