Research Consortium is Advancing the Understanding of Human Genes

By Petrina Smith
Thursday, 27 March, 2014


[caption id="attachment_7314" align="alignright" width="200"]UQ’s Australian Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology associate professors Ernst Wolvetang and Christine Wells have spearheaded groundbreaking international DNA research. UQ’s Australian Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology associate professors Ernst Wolvetang and Christine Wells have spearheaded groundbreaking international DNA research.[/caption]
University of Queensland researchers have joined forces with scientists from more than 20 nations to form the The Functional Annotation of the Mammalian Genome (FANTOM) research consortium, a project  advancing understanding of human genes, giving unprecedented insight into health, development and behaviour.
Associate Professor Christine Wells, from UQ’s Australian Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology, said the  international collaborative project was providing the keys needed to read and understand the “DNA book”.
“The way DNA information is used in different cells at different times, through development – or in cells interacting with environmental signals – is a whole library of information. “We are only just coming to terms with the size of the library. “We don’t really understand the ‘cataloguing’ system and we are trying hard to find the rules to help us navigate the rich information now available. “This exciting project is revealing whole libraries, and whole shelves and books in the library, that we have never seen before.
“It is giving us information about the role of some genes that were previously unknown. “The cure for a disease may well be held in one of these books, but this project is mapping the library, and not hunting for any single thing.”
The Australian Infectious Diseases Research Centre at UQ (UQ-AID), also contributes to Associate Professor Wells’ AIBN research group and to FANTOM.
AIBN’s involvement in FANTOM has resulted in long-term collaborations with researchers from the RIKEN Center for Life Science Technologies in Japan, and others in the UK, Denmark, the United States, Sweden, Italy and Switzerland.
Associate Professor Wells said FANTOM’s findings were enabling researchers to begin learning about the rules of DNA information flow.
“We are starting to understand how cells find the right information in the precise instant that it is needed,” she said.
“The sheer ambition of this project required hundreds of researchers, committing to a generous sharing of skills and data.
“To embed what we do in the lab at the AIBN in Brisbane into this huge global project has been extremely rewarding.”
The fifth iteration of the collaboration, known as FANTOM 5, involved UQ researchers in stem cell biology, infection and immunity.
These included Dr Antje Blumenthal and Dr Tony Kenna from the UQ Diamantina Institute; the AIBN’s Dr Kelly Hitchens, Dr Anthony Beckhouse, Dr Dipti Vijayan, Dr Dmitry Ovchinnikov and Mr James Briggs; Associate Professor Geoff Faulkner from UQ’s School of Biomedical Sciences and  Mater Research,  and Honorary Professor Alan Mackay-Sim from Griffith University.
As part of the same project, the AIBN’s Associate Professor Ernst Wolvetang has for the first time been able to map in “exquisite detail” the gene regulatory networks underlying the first steps of human brain development.
The FANTOM 5 findings have been published in the prestigious journal Nature.

Related Articles

A Day in the Life of Sarah Morse

From working as a health advisor at a safe house for human trafficking survivors to a palliative...

From an aerialist acrobat to a nurse

A career transition from an aerialist to a nurse may not seem obvious, but for Kylie...

A Day in the Life of Chelsea Bell

Chelsea works as a registered midwife at Epworth Freemasons, working in maternity, across all...


  • All content Copyright © 2024 Westwick-Farrow Pty Ltd