StochSS: A Next-Generation Toolkit for Simulation-Driven Biological Discovery

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $537,223 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project Summary The development of a mathematical model is critical to the understanding of complex biological processes because it codifies current understanding so that it can be tested against existing data. A good model with sufficient detail can be used to identify potential points of intervention (for example, drug targets) at which an undesired outcome (for example, effects of disease) of the process might be altered. Model development proceeds through a cycle of model building, simulation of the model under numerous conditions, and comparison to experimental data. The cycle is repeated and often augmented by new experiments to capture additional data, until the resulting model can plausibly explain the data. Tremendous amounts of time and effort must be devoted to finding and/or developing tools to analyze the model and compare it to the data, fit the parameters and assess the effects of typically large amounts of uncertainty in both the data and the parameters, simulate the model and analyze the simulation data, refine the model to better capture our increased understanding at each stage of the process, decide which additional experiments would add most to our understanding, etc. Our objective in the proposed work is to facilitate and accelerate the modeling process by providing state of the art, well-integrated tools to report complete and informative results at each stage, enabling the modeler and the experimentalist to focus on what they do best: scientific discovery. This is a renewal proposal that builds on the capabilities and infrastructure developed in the current project. In that work we developed StochSS, a novel Software-as-a-Service offering for quantitative modeling of biochemical networks capable of seamless deployment in public cloud environments. StochSS does an excellent job of supporting two of the major steps of the modeling process: Model Building - taking your model description and putting it into a form that the StochSS simulation engines can work with, and Simulation - performing the simulations to produce the results. The proposed project has three complementary Aims. The first is to further develop StochSS's core capabilities and to take the steps that will ensure its long-term sustainability; the second is to develop a Model Development Toolkit, and the third is to develop a Model Exploration Toolkit. Both of these toolkits will be integrated into our existing StochSS Model Building and Simulation environment and will leverage our existing software infrastructure for cloud computing. Aim 1. Core Capabilities and Long-Term Sustainability This aim has three sub-aims: (1) instituting practices that will help ensure community involvement and better long-term sustainability of StochSS beyond NIH funding, (2) extending core StochSS functional capabilities, and (3) improving compatibility with other software via support for standard data formats. Aim 2. Model Development Toolkit Develop and integrate tools to faci...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10244992
Project number
5R01EB014877-07
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SANTA BARBARA
Principal Investigator
Linda R. Petzold
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$537,223
Award type
5
Project period
2012-05-15 → 2023-06-30