Published: September 06, 2004
AIST to Advance Life Sciences Research With IBM Supercomputer
IBM's Blue Gene System to Be Engine for Protein Structure Prediction Research

IBM announced today that
AIST, a leading Japanese research laboratory, will use an IBM BlueGene/L
supercomputer to advance their research in proteins, potentially
accelerating breakthroughs in drug design.
The Computational Biology Research Center (CBRC) of The National Institute
of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) will use the extreme
computational power of BlueGene/L to better predict 3-D protein structures,
key to understanding how drugs interact with diseases. IBM Research and
AIST are also exploring possible areas for joint research using application
software IBM has specifically designed to tackle protein simulations on
BlueGene/L.
Expected to be installed in February 2005, the BlueGene/L system will
consist of four racks, with a peak processing speed of 22.8 trillion
calculations per second, or 22.8 teraflops. The BlueGene/L supercomputer
will be 24 times more powerful and use a fraction of the floor space
compared to the CBRC's current computer systems. BlueGene/L consumes at
most 1/10th the power per computation and 1/16th the floor space of systems
of comparable compute power found on the Top 500 list of most powerful
supercomputers.
"One of our biggest research challenges is to apply data obtained from
genome decoding to protein engineering and drug design. The scale of
simulation this requires cannot be done without the help of
supercomputers," said Dr. Yutaka Akiyama, director, Computational Biology
Research Center, AIST. "IBM's BlueGene/L supercomputer provides us with a
massive supercomputing resource that will dramatically accelerate our
work."
The AIST scientists are developing parallel and distributed computing
techniques for solving large-scale data processing and searching problems
in bioinformatics. The team is also creating high performance computer
applications for molecular simulation, mass spectrometry analysis, and cell
simulation.
"From the beginning, IBM's commitment to developing the most powerful and
flexible supercomputers in the world has included a focus on tackling the
biggest challenges in life sciences," said William Pulleyblank, director of
exploratory server systems, IBM Research. "AIST's dedication to advanced
life sciences research is the perfect opportunity to combine the world's
most advanced supercomputer with a leading research institution to attack a
major scientific challenge."
If it were installed today, this supercomputer would rank third in the
world on the list of the Top 500 supercomputers announced in June 2004.
Two early prototype BlueGene/L supercomputers were ranked as the fourth and
eighth largest supercomputers in the world in June
http://www.top500.org/list/2004/06/)">. These systems exploit the advanced
processors based on IBM's Power Architecture. Earlier this year, IBM
announced its Power Everywhere initiative, designed to make this same IBM
Power Architecture more widely available for everything from consumer
electronics to supercomputers.
About Blue Gene
Blue Gene is an IBM supercomputing project which is creating a new family
of supercomputers optimized for bandwidth, scalability and the ability to
handle large amounts of data while consuming a fraction of the power and
floor space required by today's fastest systems. The project originated in
1999 in IBM's Research Division and is expected to be used worldwide by
government and university researchers as well as businesses to tackle the
most advanced challenges in several very different fields, including
genomic research, automotive design, finance, weather forecasting and fluid
dynamics. The Argonne National Laboratory in the US and ASTRON, a leading
Dutch astronomical organization, will also be installing BlueGene/L
supercomputers in 2005 to tackle unique scientific challenges.
BlueGene/L is also part of the US National Nuclear Security Administration
(NNSA)'s Advanced Simulation and Computing (ASC) Program. IBM has partnered
with the NNSA since 2001 in research and development of the BlueGene/L
architecture. The NNSA will be installing a very large BlueGene/L system in
2005 at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory to advance understanding
of materials behavior, in particular at very high densities and
temperatures.
About AIST
The National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST)
is an Independent Administrative Institution (IAI) under the Ministry of
Economy, Trade and Industry of Japan. AIST is Japan's largest public
research organization with 25 research centers, 20 research institutes, 5
research initiatives nationwide and around 3,200 employees. Aiming to
become a core base for bioinformatics research in Japan, The Computational
Biology Research Center (CBRC) applies advanced information science theory
and large-scale
high-speed computational systems to R&D efforts in order to contribute to
the dramatic advance in bioinformatics and its systemization. For more
information on AIST, visit http://www.aist.go.jp/index_en.html.
About IBM
IBM is the world's largest information technology company, with 80 years of
leadership in helping businesses innovate. Drawing on resources from across
IBM and key Business Partners, IBM offers a wide range of services,
solutions and technologies that enable customers, large and small, to take
full advantage of the new era of e-business. For more information about
IBM, visit www.ibm.com.
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