Funding-NSF-
Dear Colleague Letter: Supporting Research Advances in Microbiomes; No date
attached
NSF 16-084
Dear Colleague Letter: Supporting Research
Advances in Microbiomes
May 13, 2016
Advances in the study of the complexity of the microbial
world and the microbes that live in, on, and around plants and animals (the
microbiome) are rapidly impacting the fields of human health, food and
agriculture, energy, water and environmental resources, and driving industrial
innovation.
With this Dear Colleague Letter (DCL), the National Science
Foundation's (NSF) Directorate for Biological Sciences is announcing its vision
to support and encourage microbiome research across the phylogenetic spectrum
and biological scales; from host - microbe interactions to ecosystems. NSF BIO
will also foster the development of a national research infrastructure to
support collaborative science on microbiomes. A Fast Track Action Committee on
Mapping the Microbiome (FTAC-MM) established by the National Science and
Technology Council (NSTC) in February of 2015 concluded that contemporary
microbiome research is "uncovering an unprecedented potential for the
application of microorganisms to human, plant, animal, and environmental health;
renewable energy production; water treatment; and manufacturing." The
report further identified three areas of need based on previous Federal
investments that conform to the objectives and mission of the BIO directorate.
This multi-divisional effort is part of the BIO's continuing investments in the
study of the microbiome and is an effort that involves funding through core
programs and special solicitations.
NSF BIO encourages proposals that advance discovery in the
realm of microbiomes with support through several programs in fiscal year 2017.
These programs cross the entire BIO Directorate and span basic science through
translational research that addresses pressing global challenges and support
the development of tools needed for the 21st century.
Development of tools and infrastructure to enable new areas
of microbiome research will be supported through programs such as the Enabling Discovery
through GEnomic tools (EDGE) in the
Division of Integrative Organismal Systems (IOS). The first EDGE awards will be
made in FY2017 and encourage the development of tools that can impact broad
communities of investigators. Projects of interest could include but are not
limited to: elucidating fundamental principles by studying multiple microbiomes
and across different ecosystems, and the development of computational and
modeling tools for studying microbiomes.
Research proposals in plant - microbe symbiosis and the phytobiomes are being encouraged for support through the
new Plant Biotic Interactions (PBI) program jointly supported by NSF BIO and
the USDA National Institute for Food and Agriculture. The first awards in this
program will also be made in FY2017. The scope of the PBI program extends from
fundamental mechanisms in model systems to translational efforts that advance
agriculture. Exploratory projects that enable the development of breakthrough technologies for animal and
plant phenomics and microbiomes are
being supported through the EAGER mechanism in collaboration with USDA/NIFA,
with awards expected in late FY2016.
The Symbiosis, Defense and Self-recognition (SDS) program
in IOS supports research in animal - microbe interactions and animal
microbiomes as well as symbiotic interactions among microbial communities. SDS
also supports research on the virome and animal
health and the origins of emerging infectious diseases, an area identified of
underinvestment by the FTAC-MM.
Within the Division of Environmental Biology (DEB) all four
program clusters (Population and Community Ecology, Evolutionary Processes,
Systematics and Biodiversity Science, and Ecosystem Science) support
microbiome-related research, in addition to two special programs: Dimensions of
Biodiversity and Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Disease.
Within the Division of Biological Infrastructure (DBI), the
Advances in Biological Informatics (ABI) program supports the development of
robust cyberinfrastructure and informatics tools to support the large data
analyses as these relate to microbiome research.
In the Division of Molecular and Cellular Biosciences
(MCB), the Systems and Synthetic Biology Cluster support the application of
quantitative and interdisciplinary tools to the study of microbial communities
and the microbiome.
Investigators are encouraged to visit the NSF website (https://www.nsf.gov)
for funding opportunities, guidelines, and due dates for these programs. NSF
will continue to release Dear Colleague Letters and Solicitations as the
microbiome campaign continues into the future.
For more information or questions, please contact one of
the following:
Sincerely,
James L. Olds
Assistant Director for the Biological Sciences
National Science Foundation