FOA-FY2022 FICUS
Research with JGI and EMSL; LOI March 17, 2021
Agency
US
Department of Energy – Office of Science – Environmental Molecular Sciences
Laboratory (EMSL)
Description
Letters
of Intent (LOI) for collaborative research applications with the Environmental
Molecular Sciences Laboratory (EMSL) and the Joint Genome Institute (JGI) are
being accepted until March 17,
2021. This
call is part of the Facilities Integrating Collaborations for User Science
(FICUS) program – a collaboration that was developed between user facilities
stewarded by the Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Biological and
Environmental Research (BER). FICUS was established in 2014 to encourage and
enable researchers to more easily integrate the expertise and capabilities of
multiple user facilities into their research and represented a unique
opportunity for researchers to combine the power of genomics and molecular
characterization in one proposed research project.
Focused
Topic Areas:
- Biofuels,
biomaterials and bioproducts – Projects
should be aimed at characterizing biological processes (including those
derived via synthetic biology approaches) that are relevant to biofuels,
biomaterials and bioproducts production, and
connecting these processes to genomics-based analyses in DOE-relevant
plants, algae, fungi, bacteria, archaea and viruses. Relevant
biological processes include biosynthesis and deconstruction of plant
polymers, especially lignocellulose, and production of metabolites that
are precursors of biofuels, biomaterials, and/or non-pharmaceutical bioproducts. Proposals for projects investigating
organisms and/or biological products involved in plant-microbial
interactions that impact biofuel and bioproduct
feedstock productivity are also encouraged.
- Biogeochemistry – Projects
should focus on the cycling and transport of elements and molecular
compounds in soils, atmosphere, aquatic sediments and the subsurface, or
on their involvement in regulatory/metabolic processes of plants, algae,
fungi, bacteria, archaea and viruses. Proposals should seek to illuminate
key biogeochemical processes through which these organisms and their
communities influence the cycling of biogeochemically critical elements, as well as the
transformation and transport of contaminants. Such projects should seek to
link microbial populations, genes and traits to molecular
biochemistry.
- Inter-organismal
interactions –
Projects should explore the exchange of carbon, nitrogen and other
elements among plants, algae, fungi, bacteria, archaea and viruses in
above and below ground ecosystems and their interfaces, as well as
investigate signaling, cooperation or competition via physical or chemical
means. Proposals for projects studying the impact of genetic
diversity within plant populations on plant-associated microbial
communities and plant-microbial interactions are also encouraged, as are
those structurally or functionally characterizing secondary metabolites
and their associated biosynthetic pathways potentially involved in
cell-cell interactions.
- Novel applications
of molecular techniques –
Projects should be aimed at stretching the boundaries of scientific
integration of capabilities across the user facilities. Outcomes should
have long-term benefits to DOE/BER missions involving biofuels,
biomaterials and bioproducts production,
plant-microbe interactions and nutrient exchange, ecosystem resilience or
plasticity in response to environmental stress, and land-atmosphere
exchanges and feedbacks. Structural and functional characterization of
novel proteins (e.g., enzymes), compounds (e.g., secondary metabolites) or
biomaterials produced by genes found in (meta)genomic data, as well as assignment of function to
uncultivated organisms, are of particular interest. For high-risk
exploratory studies aimed at assessing the general feasibility or
establishing proof of principle for a proposed approach or study design,
the scope should be limited to a scale required to demonstrate novel
results, with the possibility of expanded support after successful
completion.
- Utilize soils from
the NEON Biorepository and EMSL/JGI capabilities to conduct continental
scale ecosystem research
– Projects should investigate the soil chemistry and soil microbial
communities across NEON sites along climate/vegetation gradients or
seasonal variation at specific sites. NEON, the National Ecological
Observatory Network, is a national network of terrestrial and aquatic
sites located across the US, including Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico
that captures more than 180 data products collected either continuously or
with vast seasonal standardized sampling campaigns including soils.
Announcement
Number
N/A
Closing
Date
Letters
of Intent: March 17,
2021
Link
to Full Announcement
https://www.emsl.pnnl.gov/proposals/call-for-ficus-research-proposals-with-jgi-and-emsl-fy----/1596
Contact
Information
Terry
Law
(509)-371-6201
terry.law@pnnl.gov