Alfred Russel Wallace goes online

"What this should hopefully do is result in a major upgrade in the quality of writing about Wallace," the historian told BBC News.

"Next year is the centenary of his death. Just like 2009 was the big Darwin year, 2013 will be the big Wallace year. And I hope now that people have access to all of his literature, it will make a big difference to what they say and write about him."

Wallace Online gathers together in one place for the first time all of the naturalist's writings and illustrations.

There are 28,000 pages of searchable documents and 22,000 images. Among the online gems is that first announcement of the theory of evolution delivered to a London scientific meeting 154 years ago.

Collections It remains one of the great coincidences in scientific history that the one person Wallace should choose to approach to share his ideas on natural selection was the only other scientist who separately had come to the same conclusions – Charles Darwin.

via www.bbc.co.uk

The Pregnable Fortress

British Singapore took far less time to surrender than I took to finish this book.  At over 600 pages, much of it dumps of primary and secondary information, this felt like reading the appendices of a book that was missing, something that took me at a high level through the fall of Singapore before plunging into detail.  If ever I have missed forest for trees, it was reading The Pregnable Fortress.  At the risk of sounding overly negative, I think this would be a great second book to read about the fall, after getting sense of the overall narrative and context from another source.  

SINGAPORE The focus of most World War II writing, at least that I've been exposed to, has been the war in Europe, both western and eastern fronts, and secondarily the American effort in the Pacific after Pearl Harbor.  Until living in Singapore I had no sense of the importance Singapore had as an eastern bastion of the British Empire, and was widely viewed as "impregnable" (as the Titanic was viewed as unsinkable).  Expected to hold for weeks or months, in theory until the Royal Navy's Mediterranean fleet could be dispatched for relief, Singapore fell to the Japanese in 6 days.  In Churchill's words it was "the worst disaster and largest capitulation in British history".  Britain's stature in the Far East was permanently crippled. 

What I learned: While General Percival, Singapore's military commander, has been historically blamed for the surrender, the loss of Singapore arose from a blend of indifference and incompetence in London, including years of neglect by Churchill himself (manifested for example in a lack of adequate air cover), mass desertions by Australian and Indian troops, and petty infighting among senior British officials in Singapore and Malaya.   The British underestimated the Japanese almost to the end, and paid a rough price (though not I think as great a price as the Chinese population).

Unfortunately the Japanese were pushed too far into the periphery in the book – the dire situation with their supply lines and ammunition were presented almost as afterthought.  They were on the verge of ending the their advance when Percival capitulated, but little detail is presented on their situation or leadership.

A dense read, but worth it for a pacific war buff.

NUS invests $150 million in mechanobiology

There is a lot to admire about Singapore's long standing determination to develop its knowledge economy and propel its scientific institutions to global leadership.  When a decision is made to invest, they go for it, with world class expertise and funding.  Chris Hogue pointed me at this announcement of a 10 year, $150 M committment to cutting edge biology.  I've said it before, Singapore is a great place to be in the science business.

National University of Singapore (NUS) – A global university centred in Asia.
A new Mechanobiology Research Centre of Excellence (RCE), which will work on new ways of studying diseases through the mechanisms of cell and tissue mechanics, will be set up at NUS. It will receive a funding of $150 million over 10 years from the National Research Foundation and the Ministry of Education. The Mechanobiology RCE will be NUS’ third Research Centre of Excellence following two other RCEs – the Centre for Quantum Technologies and Cancer Science Institute of Singapore.


Led by Director-designate Prof Michael Sheetz from the Department of Biological Sciences at Columbia University and co-Director-designate Prof Paul Matsudaira, Head of the NUS Department of Biological Sciences, the centre will have three integrated inter-disciplinary teams working on cellular, molecular and tissue mechanics. The researchers will endeavour to develop powerful quantitative physical and biochemical models to define dynamic cellular functions, experimental reagents and tools for studying diseases of cells and tissues.

Blueprint redux

Blueprint logo.gif
The Hogue lab and the Blueprint trademark are alive and well at NUS in Singapore.

Brief History:  Between 1997-2007 the Hogue Laboratory (Blueprint.org) 
was located at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto where we developed BIND
and other bioinformatics resources.  Dr. Hogue was affiliated with the
University of Toronto as a non-tenure track Associate Professor. 
Facing funding and staffing cutbacks in 2005, the intellectual property
amassed by the group was sold by Mount Sinai Hospital & founders to
Thomson-Reuters Scientific in March of 2007. 

In late 2007 Dr.
Hogue moved to Singapore where he is now tenure-track faculty in
Southeast Asia's Premiere Research University – the National
Unviversity of Singapore.

And he has put up the archives of the old Mt. Sinai-based phase of the project.  Ah, memories.  Having helped open the Blueprint node in Singapore a few years ago, it's great to see Blueprint find new life there. 

Australian to paddle surfboard from Singapore to Indonesia for villagers’ charity

from The Jakarta Post –

An Australian athlete plans to paddle a surfboard across one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes this weekend to raise aid money for remote Indonesian villages.
Jackson English, 31, of Avoca Beach in New South Wales state, believes he would be the first person to "paddleboard" from Singapore to Indonesia’s Batam island and back, a total of 80 kilometers.
He was scheduled to leave Singapore on Saturday morning and return Sunday.
English said by phone he hopes his feat will raise about US$300,000 in donation pledges.
He said the money the humanitarian organization SurfAid International will use the money for a boat to haul supplies and aid staff to remote villages on Indonesia’s Mentawai Islands off Sumatra.

This is a great cause and I wish him well, but 50,000 ships – big ships – a year (that’s 137/day) pass through the Strait of Malacca.  I hope he’s a fast paddler.

The Blueprint of Life

An article on Blueprint  in BioscienceWorld.  Some key clips:

In fields ranging from medicine and biotechnology to agriculture and
the environment, the genomics revolution of the past decade is slowly
giving way to a systems-wide approach to solving biological questions,
as scientists are reminded that living organisms are comprised of more
than just their genes. Although invaluable, initiatives like the Human
Genome Project provide researchers with a parts list of life, but don’t
offer much information about how these parts assemble to create cells,
tissues and organisms.

Proteome projects have gone a long way toward filling in the gaps,
offering scientists information about protein content, numbers and
modifications. But in general, even these efforts can only provide a
snapshot of what is going on within a cell or organ, and do not always
tell researchers how these component parts interact to form complexes
and pathways critical to the function of life. More recently, however,
academic, government and commercial groups worldwide are addressing
this problem, finding ways to pull together biomolecular interaction
and pathway data from various sources into central repositories against
which researchers can test their hypotheses and probe for new insights…..

….Several groups, both commercial and academic, have undertaken a
systematic analysis of how biologically important molecules interact
both in the cell and in the lab….

….The largest of these databases, however, can be found in Canada at the
Blueprint Initiative (Blueprint), a research program of the Samuel
Lunenfeld Research Institute (SLRI) in Toronto, Ont.’s Mount Sinai
Hospital. Led by Christopher Hogue, PhD, Blueprint’s goal is to provide
researchers worldwide with free access to the information and tools
they need to improve their understanding of basic biology and human
health. To achieve this, they develop, host and maintain public
databases and bioinformatics software tools.

The central pillar of Blueprint’s efforts is the Biomolecular
Interaction Network Database (BIND), which captures data generated by
expensive research efforts in a computationally accessible format. BIND
records — which span molecular interactions, small-molecule chemical
reactions and genetic interaction networks — allow researchers to
identify macromolecular complexes, metabolic pathways and potential
clues to drug targets and leads. BIND is populated with interaction
data directly deposited by researchers or extracted from peer-reviewed
literature and a variety of genomic, proteomic, pathway and
disease-specific databases, which Blueprint curates and validates using
rigorous bioinformatics standards.

Currently, BIND houses more than 120,000 records of paired interactions
and complexes involving biopolymers (e.g., proteins, DNA and RNA) and
small molecules (e.g., lipids, nucleotides, sugars and ions). Using any
of more than 20 different search functions available through BIND’s Web
interface, researchers can identify interacting molecules on the basis
of their sequences, gene names, publication record and species origin,
to name a few, and examine how these interactions interplay with larger
molecular networks using BIND’s Interaction Viewer. Alternatively, new
features allow researchers to search relatively broad terms, such as
cancer, and pinpoint molecules of particular interest based on
characteristics such as subcellular co-localization, biological
function and binding partners…

….In August 2004, Blueprint’s Singapore node, Blueprint Asia, initiated a
collaboration with the Novartis Institute for Tropical Diseases
(Singapore, Singapore) (NITD) to assemble and curate known protein
interactions relevant to the biology of dengue virus.

“By examining information about dengue virus alongside other data in
the BIND repository, NITD scientists will gain a better understanding
of the dengue life cycle and of complex interactions with host proteins
leading to dengue hemorrhagic fever,” says Brian Yates, managing
director of Blueprint Asia. “This information can then be used to
develop drugs or vaccines to fight the disease.”

The collaboration is also expected to help NITD researchers identify
gaps in their information base, which could lead to the exploration of
new research avenues.

Almost regardless of the source, however, these interaction databases
and bioinformatics tools offer researchers insights into the function
of the cell and thereby offer the hope of turning molecular parts lists
provided by genome initiatives into blueprints of life.