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Bioinformatics and Biology Insights

The Widening Gulf between Genomics Data Generation and Consumption: A Practical Guide to Big Data Transfer Technology

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Bioinformatics and Biology Insights 2015:Suppl. 1 9-19

Review

Published on 23 Sep 2015

DOI: 10.4137/BBI.S28988


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Abstract

In the last decade, high-throughput DNA sequencing has become a disruptive technology and pushed the life sciences into a distributed ecosystem of sequence data producers and consumers. Given the power of genomics and declining sequencing costs, biology is an emerging “Big Data” discipline that will soon enter the exabyte data range when all subdisciplines are combined. These datasets must be transferred across commercial and research networks in creative ways since sending data without thought can have serious consequences on data processing time frames. Thus, it is imperative that biologists, bioinformaticians, and information technology engineers recalibrate data processing paradigms to fit this emerging reality. This review attempts to provide a snapshot of Big Data transfer across networks, which is often overlooked by many biologists. Specifically, we discuss four key areas: 1) data transfer networks, protocols, and applications; 2) data transfer security including encryption, access, firewalls, and the Science DMZ; 3) data flow control with software-defined networking; and 4) data storage, staging, archiving and access. A primary intention of this article is to orient the biologist in key aspects of the data transfer process in order to frame their genomics-oriented needs to enterprise IT professionals.



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Bioinformatics and Biology Insights fills a gap in current journals.  Ever more often, bioinformatics and detailed analysis of data creates novel, unexpected insights.  It is good to have a journal which focusses on exactly this aspect of bioinformatics research, putting the biology insights upfront with high respect for the different methods in bioinformatics.
Dr Thomas Dandekar (University of Wurzburg, European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Heidelberg, Germany)
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