grids for chemical informatics chemistry, iu bloomington oct. 21 2005 geoffrey fox computer science,...
TRANSCRIPT
Grids for ChemicalInformatics
Chemistry, IU Bloomington
Oct. 21 2005
Geoffrey Fox
Computer Science, Informatics, Physics
Pervasive Technology Laboratories
Indiana University Bloomington IN 47401
http://www.infomall.org
Why are Grids Important Grids are important for Chemistry because they support key
functionalities that grow in importance as we are deluged with data from instruments and simulations
Grids provide information access, storage and management Grids manage multiple simulations with different defining
parameters Grids allow complex workflows with data flowing between
filters Grids define models for portals Grids are built on top of commodity web service technology
with broad industry support – the next generation information technology
Grids are used in multiple NIH and other life science/chemistry projects across the world (BIRN, caBIG, myGrid, Comb-e-Chem )
Internet Scale Distributed Services Grids use Internet technology and are distinguished by managing
or organizing sets of network connected resources• Classic Web allows independent one-to-one access to
individual resources • Grids integrate together and manage multiple Internet-
connected resources: People, Sensors, computers, data systems
Organization can be explicit as in• TeraGrid which federates many supercomputers; • Deep Web Technologies IR Grid which federates multiple data
resources; • CrisisGrid which federates first responders, commanders,
sensors, GIS, (Tsunami) simulations, science/public data Organization can be implicit as in Internet resources such as
curated databases and simulation resources that “harmonize a community”
Different Visions of the Grid Grid just refers to the technologies
• Or Grids represent the full system/Applications DoD’s vision of Network Centric Computing can be considered a
Grid (linking sensors, warfighters, commanders, backend resources) and they are building the GiG (Global Information Grid)
Utility Computing or X-on-demand (X=data, computer ..) is major computer Industry interest in Grids and this is key part of enterprise or campus Grids
e-Science or Cyberinfrastructure are virtual organization Grids supporting global distributed science (note sensors, instruments are people are all distributed
Skype (Kazaa) VOIP system is a Peer-to-peer Grid (and VRVS/GlobalMMCS like Internet A/V conferencing are Collaboration Grids)
Commercial 3G Cell-phones and DoD ad-hoc network initiative are forming mobile Grids
Types of Computing Grids Running “Pleasing Parallel Jobs” as in United Devices, Entropia
(Desktop Grid) “cycle stealing systems” Can be managed (“inside” the enterprise as in Condor) or more
informal (as in SETI@Home) Computing-on-demand in Industry where jobs spawned are
perhaps very large (SAP, Oracle …) Support distributed file systems as in Legion (Avaki), Globus with
(web-enhanced) UNIX programming paradigm• Particle Physics will run some 30,000 simultaneous jobs
Distributed Simulation HLA/RTI style Grids Linking Supercomputers as in TeraGrid Pipelined applications linking data/instruments, compute,
visualization Seamless Access where Grid portals allow one to choose one of
multiple resources with a common interfaces Parallel Computing typically NOT suited for a Grid (latency)
Large Scale Parallel Computers
Old Style Metacomputing GridQuickTime™ and a
decompressorare needed to see this picture.
QuickTime™ and a decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
IMAGING INSTRUMENTS
COMPUTATIONALRESOURCES
LARGE-SCALE DATABASES
DATA ACQUISITION ,ANALYSIS
ADVANCEDVISUALIZATION
Analysis and Visualization
Original: Spread a single large Problem over multiple supercomputersNow-1: Control multiple smallish jobs each on independent ComputersNow-2: Choose which of a few supercomputers to use
Large Disks
Computation
Starlight (Chicago) Netherlight
(Amsterdam)
Leeds
PSC
SDSC
UCL
Network PoP Service Registry
NCSA
Manchester
UKLight
Oxford
RAL
US TeraGrid
UK NGS
Steering clients
SC05
Local laptops in Seattle and UK
All sites connected by production
network (not all shown)
Towards an International Compute Grid Infrastructure
Information/Knowledge Grids Distributed (10’s to 1000’s) of data sources (instruments,
file systems, curated databases …) Data Deluge: 1 (now) to 100’s petabytes/year (2012)
• Moore’s law for Sensors Possible filters assigned dynamically (on-demand)
• Run image processing algorithm on telescope image• Run Gene sequencing algorithm on compiled data
Needs decision support front end with “what-if” simulations
Metadata (provenance) critical to annotate data
Integrate across experiments as in multi-wavelength astronomy
Data Deluge comes from pixels/year available
Data Deluged Science Now particle physics will get 100 petabytes from CERN using
around 30,000 CPU’s simultaneously 24X7 Exponential growth in data and compare to:
• The Bible = 5 Megabytes• Annual refereed papers = 1 Terabyte• Library of Congress = 20 Terabytes• Internet Archive (1996 – 2002) = 100 Terabytes
Weather, climate, solid earth (EarthScope) Bioinformatics curated databases (Biocomplexity only 1000’s of
data points at present) Virtual Observatory and SkyServer in Astronomy Environmental Sensor nets In the past, HPCC community worried about data in the form of
parallel I/O or MPI-IO, but we didn’t consider it as an enabler of new science and new ways of computing
Data assimilation was not central to HPCC DoE ASCI set up because didn’t want test data!
Virtual Observatory Astronomy GridIntegrate Experiments
Radio Far-Infrared Visible
Visible + X-ray
Dust Map
Galaxy Density Map
International Virtual Observatory Alliance
• Reached international agreements on Astronomical Data Query Language, VOTable 1.1, UCD 1+, Resource Metadata Schema
• Image Access Protocol, Spectral Access Protocol and Spectral Data Model, Space-Time Coordinates definitions and schema
• Interoperable registries by Jan 2005 (NVO, AstroGrid, AVO, JVO) using OAI publishing and harvesting
• So each Community of Interest builds data AND service standards that build on GS-* and WS-*
myGrid Project• Imminent
‘deluge’ of data• Highly
heterogeneous• Highly complex
and inter-related• Convergence of
data and literature archives
A B C
The Williams Workflows
A: Identification of overlapping sequenceB: Characterisation of nucleotide sequenceC: Characterisation of protein sequence
Web services Web Services build
loosely-coupled, distributed applications, (wrapping existing codes and databases) based on the SOA (service oriented architecture) principles.
Web Services interact by exchanging messages in SOAP format
The contracts for the message exchanges that implement those interactions are described via WSDL interfaces.
Databases
Humans
ProgramsComputational resources
Devices
reso
urce
s
BP
EL,
Jav
a, .N
ET
serv
ice
logi
c
<env:Envelope> <env:Header> ... </env:header> <env:Body> ... </env:Body></env:Envelope> m
essa
ge p
roce
ssin
g
SO
AP
and
WS
DL
SOAP messages
A typical Web Service In principle, services can be in any language (Fortran .. Java ..
Perl .. Python) and the interfaces can be method calls, Java RMI Messages, CGI Web invocations, totally compiled away (inlining)
The simplest implementations involve XML messages (SOAP) and programs written in net friendly languages like Java and Python
PaymentCredit Card
WarehouseShippingcontrol
WSDL interfaces
WSDL interfaces
Security CatalogPortalService
Web Services
Web Services
Two-level Programming I• The Web Service (Grid) paradigm implicitly assumes a
two-level Programming Model• We make a Service (same as a “distributed object” or
“computer program” running on a remote computer) using conventional technologies– C++ Java or Fortran Monte Carlo module
– Data streaming from a sensor or Satellite
– Specialized (JDBC) database access
• Such services accept and produce data from users files and databases
• The Grid is built by coordinating such services assuming we have solved problem of programming the service
Service Data
Two-level Programming II The Grid is discussing the composition of distributed
services with the runtime interfaces to Grid as opposed to UNIX pipes/data streams
Familiar from use of UNIX Shell, PERL or Python scripts to produce real applications from core programs
Such interpretative environments are the single processor analog of Grid Programming
Some projects like GrADS from Rice University are looking at integration between service and composition levels but dominant effort looks at each level separately
Service1 Service2
Service3 Service4
Database Database
Analysis and VisualizationPortal
RepositoriesFederated Databases
Data Filter
Services
Field Trip DataStreaming Data
Sensors
?DiscoveryServices
SERVOGrid
ResearchSimulations
Research Education
CustomizationServices
From Research
to Education
EducationGrid ComputerFarmGrid of Grids: Research Grid and Education Grid
GISGrid
Sensor GridDatabase Grid
Compute Grid
SERVOGrid Requirements Seamless Access to Data repositories and large scale
computers Integration of multiple data sources including sensors,
databases, file systems with analysis system• Including filtered OGSA-DAI (Grid database access)
Rich meta-data generation and access with SERVOGrid specific Schema extending openGIS (Geography as a Web service) standards and using Semantic Grid
Portals with component model for user interfaces and web control of all capabilities
Collaboration to support world-wide work Basic Grid tools: workflow and notification NOT metacomputing
SERVOGrid SERVOGrid Portal Screen Portal Screen
ShotsShots
n: Service refers to core services identified by DoDCoI Community of Interest GIS Geographical Information System
Physical Network
4: Discovery 11: Metadata
Earthquake GridDoD NCOW Grid
…CoI SpecificGrids/Services
…
8: Data Access/Storage
2: Security 5: Mediation3: Messaging 1: Management
7: PortalsInformation Grid
Sensor Grid
Compute Grid
GIS Grid
Core Low Level Grid Services
6: Collaboration Grid
9: Application Services 10: Policy (ECS)
C2 (JBI CEE etc.)NCOW-IS Services
Earthquake Data& Simulation ServiceServoIS
Physical Network
4: Discovery 11: Metadata
BioInformatics GridChemical Informatics Grid
…Domain SpecificGrids/Services
…
8: Data Access/Storage
2: Security 5: Workflow3: Messaging 1: Management
7: PortalsInformation Grid
Instrument Grid
Compute Grid
MIS Grid
Core Low Level Grid Services
6: Collaboration Grid
9: Application Services 10: Policy
M(B,C)IS Molecular (Bio, Chem) Information System
HTS ToolsQuantumCalculationsCIS
Sequencing ToolsBiocomplexity SimulationsBIS
GIS Grid with WMS, WFS, data sources and GML
Railroads
RiversBridges
Interstate Highways
90
WFS Server
SQL Query
Railroads
[a-b]
SQ
L Q
uery
Riv
er [a
-d]
Bri
dge
[1-5
]
SQL QueryHigway [12-18]
`
ClientWMS
GetFeature
FeatureCollection
Get
Feat
ure
Feat
ureC
olle
ctio
n
<gml:featureMember> <fault> <name> Northridge2 </name> <segment> Northridge2
</segment> <author> Wald D. J.</author> <gml:lineStringProperty> <gml:LineString
srsName="null"> <gml:coordinates>
-118.72,34.243 -118.591,34.176 </gml:coordinates>
</gml:LineString> </gml:lineStringProperty> </fault> </gml:featureMember>
GML becomes CML, CellML, SBML
Electric Power and Natural Gas data from LANL Interdependent Critical Infrastructure Simulations
Zoom-in
Zoom-out
FeatureInfo mode
Measure distance mode
Clear Distance
Drag and Drop mode
Refresh to initial map
Google maps can be integrated with Web Feature Service Archives to filter and browse seismic records.
Integrating Archived Web
Feature Services and Google Maps
What is Happening? Grid ideas are being developed in (at least) four communities
• Web Service – W3C, OASIS, (DMTF)• Grid Forum (High Performance Computing, e-Science)• Enterprise Grid Alliance (Commercial “Grid Forum” with a
near term focus) Service Standards are being debated Grid Operational Infrastructure is being deployed Grid Architecture and core software being developed
• Apache has several important projects as do academia; large and small companies
Particular System Services are being developed “centrally” – OGSA or GS-* framework for this in GGF; WS-* for OASIS/W3C/Microsoft-IBM
Lots of fields are setting domain specific standards and building domain specific services
USA started but now Europe is probably in the lead and Asia will soon catch USA if momentum (roughly zero for USA) continues
The Grid and Web Service Institutional Hierarchy
1: Container and Run Time (Hosting) Environment
2: System Services and FeaturesHandlers like WS-RM, Security, Programming Models like BPEL
or Registries like UDDI
3: Generally Useful Services and FeaturesSuch as “Access a Database” or “Submit a Job” or “ManageCluster” or “Support a Portal” or “Collaborative Visualization”
4: Application or Community of InterestSpecific Services
such as “Run BLAST” or “Look at Houses for sale”
OGSA GS-*and some WS-*GGF/W3C/….
WS-* fromOASIS/W3C/Industry
Apache Axis.NET etc.
Must set standards to get interoperability
Location of software for Grid Projects in Community Grids Laboratory
htpp://www.naradabrokering.org provides Web service (and JMS) compliant distributed publish-subscribe messaging (software overlay network)
htpp://www.globlmmcs.org is a service oriented (Grid) collaboration environment (audio-video conferencing)
http://www.crisisgrid.org is an OGC (open geospatial consortium) Geographical Information System (GIS) compliant GIS and Sensor Grid (with POLIS center)
http://www.opengrids.org has WS-Context, Extended UDDI etc.
The work is still in progress but NaradaBrokering is quite mature
All software is open source and freely available
Project Goals Establish Requirements from stakeholders
• Research
• Pharmaceutical Industry
• Government
Consider educational implications• e-Science v Bio/Chem/Molecular Informatics
Consider other national and international projects to ensure we either lead or use best practice
Design a Grid architecture and staged implementation Start pilot projects led by Chemistry/Chemical Informatics Evaluate and iterate Design and implement ?(Chem, Life Science, Science, Molecular)
Informatics educational program that will attract students Write winning center grant in 2006-7
Web Services Introduction
• What are “Web Services”?– A distributed invocation system built on Grid
computing• Independent of platform and programming
language• Built on existing Web standards
– A service oriented architecture with• Interfaces based on Internet protocols• Messages in XML (except for binary data
attachments)
Web Services Introduction
• A web-based architecture providing for interoperability among resources– Centralized service registry– Solves problems associated with finding, using, and
combining online resources
• Employ standard Internet protocols for:– Communication with resources– Automated discovery using centralized registries
• Communicate with devices, people, and each other with the protocols and computer languages
Service Oriented Architecture (SOA)
• Goal is to achieve loose coupling among interacting software agents
• Define service: a unit of work done by a service provider to achieve desired end results for a service consumer
• Both provider and consumer are roles played by software agents on behalf of their owners.
How does SOA work?
• Two architectural constraints are employed– Small set of simple and ubiquitous interfaces
to all participating software agents– Descriptive messages constrained by an
extensible schema delivered through the interfaces
Web Services Architectures
• Individual services are registered globally– Broken down into individual services with
inputs and outputs specified
• Services are published
• Services are requested
• Open registry, publishing, and requesting
Service-Oriented Architecture
• From Curcin et al. DDT, 2005, 10(12),867
Web Services for Science
• Invisible Services, Semantic Web, and Grid
• Easy-to-use tools for any scientist• High throughput, resource intensive
computing done for low cost/resources• Shared community
– Collaborations between labs and fields– Shared data– Shared tools
e-Science and the Grid 1
• e-Science: Major UK Program – global collaboration in key areas of science and the
next generation of infrastructure that will enable it• reflects growing importance of international
laboratories, satellites and sensors and their integrated analysis by distributed teams
• total investment of some £200M over the five-year period from 2001 to 2006
• CyberInfrastructure: the analogous US initiative• Grid Technology: supports e-Science &
Cyberinfrastructure
Basic Architectures:Servlets/CGI and Web Services
Browser
WebServer
HTTP GET/POST
DB or MPIAppl.
JDBC
WebServer
DBor MPIAppl.
JDBC
Browser
WebServer
SOAP
GUIClient
SOAPWSDL
WSDL
WSD
LWSD
L
Importance of Web Services
• Building a true science community
• Enabling interoperability between tools and the integration of data
• Less time coding, more time for science
• Change the way scientists work by achieving new levels of integration
When To Use Web Services?
• Applications do not have severe restrictions on reliability and speed.
• Two or more organizations need to cooperate.– One needs to write an application that uses another’s service.
• Services can be upgraded independently of clients.
• Services can be easily expressed with simple request/response semantics and simple state.
Web Services Benefits
• Web services provide a clean separation between a capability and its user interface.
• Increase in productivity
• Increase in flexibility
• Rapid return on investment
• Integration across multiple applications
Web Services Advantages
• Output in human- and computer-readable formats
• I/O formats based on standard Internet protocols
• Resources accessible server to server allow automated I/O
• Integration based on specific services: you select services or data needed without downloading the entire data set
Web Services Advantages
• Description protocols provide details of service provided and interface components
• Semantic Web standards increase efficiency
• Use a central registry and standardized description of services
• Quality and status of the information is dynamically available
Web Services Drawbacks
• Based on new technologies
• Time and commitment required to learn
• Standards still in a state of rapid flux
• Issues with quality of data, (and for chemistry, quantity of open data), security, and privacy
Components of Web Services
• Protocols– SOAP– WSDL– UDDI
• XML as a basis for the protocols
• Ontologies– OWL: Ontology Web Language
• Semantic Web
Components of the Semantic Web for Chemistry
• XML – eXtensible Markup Language• RDF – Resource Description Framework• RSS – Rich Site Summary• Dublin Core – allows metadata-based
newsfeeds• OWL – for ontologies• BPEL4WS – for workflow and web services
– Murray-Rust et al. Org. Biomol. Chem. 2004, 2, 3192-3203.
SOAP: Simple Object Access Protocol
• Flexible protocol to communicate information between server and server or client and server using XML
• Supports Remote Procedure Calls
• Allows layers (security, authentication, transactions) over the basic SOAP elements
WSDL: Web Service Definition Language
• Describes a service’s interface to clients
• Services register themselves with Web Services
• WSDL describes how to contact and interact with services– I/O, operations and messages to aid
interaction with client
WSDL Overview
• An XML-based Interface Definition Language.– You can define the APIs for all of your services in WSDL.
• WSDL docs are broken into five major parts:– Data definitions (in XML) for custom types – Abstract message definitions (request, response)– Organization of messages into “ports” and “operations”
(classes and methods).– Protocol bindings (to SOAP, for example)– Service point locations (URLs)
• Some interesting features– A single WSDL document can describe several versions of an
interface.– A single WSDL doc can describe several related services.
UDDI: Universal Description, Discovery, and Integration
• Provides ways for clients and services to interact with other services
• Uses XML• Defines the means of access, e.g.,
– URL– E-Mail
• Defines services hosted by an entity• Business-oriented tags• Uses SOAP for communicating
XML: eXtensible Markup Language
• Allows definitions of types of documents
• Tags are used to specify components of documents
• Allows specification of namespaces to differentiate between identical tag names
• Tag names do not provide semantics other than simple hierarchical relations
XML Overview
• A language for building languages• Basic rules: be well formed and be valid• Particular XML “dialects” are defined by XML
schemas.– XML itself is defined by its own schema.
• Extensible via namespaces• Many non-Web services dialects
– RDF, SVG, GML, CML, XForms, XHTML
• Many basic tools available: parsers, XPath and XQuery for searching/querying, etc.
XML and Web services• XML lends itself to distributed computing:
– It’s just a data description.– Platform, programming language independent
• Web Services Description Language (WSDL)– Describes how to invoke a service– Can bind to SOAP, other protocols for actual
invocation
• Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP)– Wire protocol extension for conveying RPC calls– Can be carried over HTTP, SMTP
OWL: Web Ontology Language
• Builds on RDF and RDFS and adds a means for richer descriptions of properties and classes– Disjoint classes– Cardinality of classes– Characteristics of relations, like symmetry
Standards for Web Services
• Business Process Execution Language for Web Services (BPEL4WS)
• Ontology Web Language Semantics (OWL-S)
• Web Service Modeling Ontology (WSMO)
Standards Setting Boards
• OASIS: Organization for Advancement of Structured Information Standards– ebXML: e-business XML– UDDI: Universal Description, Discovery and
Integration
• Global Grid Forum– community of users, developers, and vendors
leading the global standardization effort for grid computing
Standards Setting Boards
• W3C: World Wide Web Consortium– OWL: Ontology Web Language– RDF/RDFS: Resource Description
Framework/Schema– SOAP: Simple Object Access Protocol– URI/URL/URN: Universal Resource
Identifier/Locator/Name– WSDL: Web Service Definition Language– XML: eXtensible Markup Language
SWWS: Semantic Web-Enabled Web Services
• Main objectives:– Provide a comprehensive Web Service
description framework– Define a Web Service discovery framework– Provide a scalable Web Service mediation
middleware
• A program of the European Commission to run 2002-2005 – http://swws.semanticweb.org
Web Services Integration Projects: Biosciences
• myGrid– http://www.mygrid.org.uk/
• BIOPIPE– http://biopipe.org/
• BioMOBY– http://biomoby.org/
Web Services for Chemistry: Problems
• Performance and scalability• Proprietary data• Competition from high-performance desktop
applications-- Geoff Hutchison, it’s a puzzle blog, 2005-01-05
• ALSO: – Lack of a substantial body of trustworthy Open
Access databases– Non-standard chemical data formats (over 40 in
regular use and requiring normalization to one another)
Missing Ingredients in Chemistry
• Chemical communities to assemble Open Access databases– Well-defined quality assurance procedures
performed by distributed peer-review systems– Software underlying the databases needs to
be open source.
Chemistry Databases on the Web
• Marc Nicklaus lists 37 databases as of October 2001– Must have structure searching and at least
100 molecules– http://cactus.nci.nih.gov/ncidb2/chem_www.html
• SoaringBear’s List has 15 databases– http://geocities.com/soaringbear/biomed/chem.html
Institutional Repositories
• NARSTO Quality Systems Science Center– http://cdiac.esd.ornl.gov/programs/NARSTO/– Pollutant species in the troposphere over
North America– Part of the Carbon Dioxide Information
Analysis Center at ORNL– NARSTO Data and Information Sharing Tool
• http://mercury.ornl.gov/narsto/
Public Data Repositories
• Developmental Therapeutics Program/NCI– Some assay data for download– Structures for over 200,000 compounds
• http://dtp.nci.nih.gov/docs/dtp_search.html
• Zinc and other screening databases
• NIST computational chemistry database
• Environmental fate and exposure databases
Other Public Repositories 1
• ChemExper Chemical Directory– > 200,000 substances; > 10,000 IR spectra– http://chemexper.com/
• HIC-Up; Hetero-Compound Identification Centre – Uppsala– 5384 substances as of 1/15/05– http://xray.bmc.uu.se/hicup/
• Chemicals with Pharmaceutical Activity; a 3D Structural Database– 400 3D structures– http://www.chem.ox.ac.uk/mom/chemical-database/
Other Public Repositories 2
• Cheminformatics.org– 41 data sets in 9 categories as of 8/18/05– http://www.cheminformatics.org/
• WebReactions– http://webreactions.net/
Other Public Repositories 3
• MolTable– http://www.moltable.org/
• MatWeb Materials Property Data– http://www.matweb.com/index.asp?ckck=1
• Spectral Database for Organic Compounds (SDBS)– Over 32,000 compounds– Has EI-MS, FT-IR, 1H NMR, 13C NMR, Raman, ESR– http://www.aist.go.jp/RIODB/SDBS/cgi-bin/cre_index.cgi
• NMRShiftDB (Christoph Steinbeck)– 14,753 structures as of 8/19/05– Features peer-reviewed submission of data sets
– http://www.nmrshiftdb.org/
Other Public Repositories:Commercial Teasers
• FTIRsearch.com (Thermo Electron)– Demo file of 575 spectra from 87,000 in the full database– https://ftirsearch.com/default3.htm
• ChemACX– 30 of >350 suppliers catalog data– http://chemacx.cambridgesoft.com/chemacx/index.asp
• Sunset Molecular Discovery, LLC– Wombat (World of Molecular BioAcTivity)
• 117,007 entries with over 230,000 biological activities– Wombat PK
• Database for Clinical Pharmacokinetics: 643 substances with 4668 measurements
– Three sample files from Wombat containing 341 Histamine-1 receptor antagonists
– http://www.sunsetmolecular.com/
BlueObelisk.org
• A group of chemists, programmers, and informaticians working collaboratively on projects such as:– Chemistry Development Kit (CDK)– JChemPaint– Jmol– JUMBO– NMRShiftDB– Octet– Open Babel– QSAR– World Wide Molecular Matrix (WWMM)
Indiana University Existing Projects
• System for the Integration of Bioinformatics Services (SIBIOS)– http://sibios.engr.iupui.edu
• PlatCom: A Platform for Computational Comparative Genomics– http://bio.informatics.indiana.edu/sunkim/Platcom/
• Reciprocal Net– http://www.reciprocalnet.org/index.html
Indiana University Planned Projects
• Design of a Grid-based distributed data architecture
• Development of tools for HTS data analysis and virtual screening
• Database for quantum mechanical simulation data
• Chemical prototype projects– Novel routes to enzymatic reaction mechanisms– Mechanism-based drug design– Data-inquiry-based development of new methods in
natural product synthesis
Web Services Future
• Depends on– Adoption of standards– Incorporation of WS in current and newly
developed applications– Security, privacy, quality of data issues– Development of WS tools and resources for e-
Science