| Literature DB >> 26378921 |
Abstract
Until recently, bioinformatics, an important discipline in the biological sciences, was largely limited to countries with advanced scientific resources. Nonetheless, several developing countries have lately been making progress in bioinformatics training and applications. In Africa, leading countries in the discipline include South Africa, Nigeria, and Kenya. However, one country that is less known when it comes to bioinformatics is Ghana. Here, I provide a first description of the development of bioinformatics activities in Ghana and how these activities contribute to the overall development of the discipline in Africa. Over the past decade, scientists in Ghana have been involved in publications incorporating bioinformatics analyses, aimed at addressing research questions in biomedical science and agriculture. Scarce research funding and inadequate training opportunities are some of the challenges that need to be addressed for Ghanaian scientists to continue developing their expertise in bioinformatics.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26378921 PMCID: PMC4574930 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004308
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Comput Biol ISSN: 1553-734X Impact factor: 4.475
Fig 1Bioinformatics-related publications authored by scientists affiliated with Ghanaian institutions.
As a measure of bioinformatics research output in Ghana, the search terms “next-generation sequencing Ghana,” “computational biology Ghana,” “bioinformatics Ghana,” “genomic Ghana,” and “in silico Ghana” were used to obtain peer-reviewed research articles published between 2004 and 2014 and indexed in the PubMed, Web of Science, and SCOPUS databases (refer to the main text for article inclusion criteria).
Major research areas in which bioinformatics has been applied in Ghana.
| Research area | Research focus |
|---|---|
| Tuberculosis | Genotyping tuberculosis isolates; genetic susceptibility to, and protection from, tuberculosis; genomic diversity and evolution of |
| Neglected tropical diseases | Genetic resistance to |
| Malaria | Evolution of malaria-protective alleles in Africa, genetic basis of resistance to malaria drugs, genetic resistance to severe malaria, polymorphisms associated with malaria, genetic basis of insecticide resistance in mosquitoes. |
| Cancer | Genome-wide association studies of prostate cancer risk in West African men. |
| Visual sciences | Genome-wide scan for quantitative traits for intraocular pressure, optineurin coding variants in primary open-angle glaucoma. |
| Animal research | Genetic diversity of village chickens across Ghana, genomic sequencing of peste des petits ruminant virus, molecular epidemiology of |
| HIV/AIDS and other viral diseases | Molecular epidemiology of HIV, betacoronaviruses-related viruses in bats, molecular characterisation of hepatitis B virus in Ghana, mother-to-child transmission of hepatitis B infections. |
| Diabetes, hypertension, and obesity | Genetic susceptibility to diabetes mellitus, polymorphisms linked to type 2 diabetes, genome-wide search for phenotypic traits linked to obesity, multilocus analysis of hypertension. |
| Inflammatory responses | Genetic susceptibility to proinflammatory responses. |
| Ahaptoglobinaemia | Genetic polymorphisms associated with ahaptoglobinaemia and hypoahaptoglobinaemia. |
| Renal function | Genome-wide studies of renal function phenotypes. |
| Crop research | Transmission of cacao pollen shoot viruses, genetic diversity of the shea tree, genetic diversity of cocoyam and cowpea, maize streak virus distribution across Ghana, genomic sequencing of viruses that cause cassava mosaic disease. |
1 HIV/AIDS, Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome.
Fig 2Opportunities for developing bioinformatics in Ghana.