Research Ideas and Outcomes (Aug 2023)

NFDI4Microbiota – national research data infrastructure for microbiota research

  • Konrad U. Förstner,
  • Anke Becker,
  • Jochen Blom,
  • Peer Bork,
  • Thomas Clavel,
  • Marius Dieckmann,
  • Alexander Goesmann,
  • Barbara Götz,
  • Thomas Gübitz,
  • Franziska Hufsky,
  • Sebastian Jünemann,
  • Marie-Louise Körner,
  • Manja Marz,
  • Ulisses Nunes Da Rocha,
  • Jörg Overmann,
  • Alfred Pühler,
  • Dietrich Rebholz-Schuhmann,
  • Alexander Sczyrba,
  • Jens Stoye,
  • Justine Vandendorpe,
  • Thea Van Rossum,
  • Alice McHardy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3897/rio.9.e110501
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
pp. 1 – 107

Abstract

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Microbes – bacteria, archaea, unicellular eukaryotes, and viruses – play an important role in human and environmental health. Growing awareness of this fact has led to a huge increase in microbiological research and applications in a variety of fields. Driven by technological advances that allow high-throughput molecular characterization of microbial species and communities, microbiological research now offers unparalleled opportunities to address current and emerging needs. As well as helping to address global health threats such as antimicrobial resistance and viral pandemics, it also has a key role to play in areas such as agriculture, waste management, water treatment, ecosystems remediation, and the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of various diseases. Reflecting this broad potential, billions of euros have been invested in microbiota research programs worldwide. Though run independently, many of these projects are closely related. However, Germany currently has no infrastructure to connect such projects or even compare their results. Thus, the potential synergy of data and expertise is being squandered. The goal of the NFDI4Microbiota consortium is to serve and connect this broad and heterogeneous research community by elevating the availability and quality of research results through dedicated training, and by facilitating the generation, management, interpretation, sharing, and reuse of microbial data. In doing so, we will also foster interdisciplinary interactions between researchers. NFDI4Microbiota will achieve this by creating a German microbial research network through training and community-building activities, and by creating a cloud-based system that will make the storage, integration and analysis of microbial data, especially omics data, consistent, reproducible, and accessible across all areas of life sciences. In addition to increasing the quality of microbial research in Germany, our training program will support widespread and proper usage of these services. Through this dual emphasis on education and services, NFDI4Microbiota will ensure that microbial research in Germany is synergistic and efficient, and thus excellent. By creating a central resource for German microbial research, NDFDI4Microbiota will establish a connecting hub for all NFDI consortia that work with microbiological data, including GHGA, NFDI4Biodiversity, NFDI4Agri and several others. NFDI4Microbiota will provide non-microbial specialists from these consortia with direct and easy access to the necessary expertise and infrastructure in microbial research in order to facilitate their daily work and enhance their research. The links forged through NFDI4Microbiota will not only increase the synergy between NFDI consortia, but also elevate the overall quality and relevance of microbial research in Germany.

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