Published September 8, 2022 | Version v1
Journal article Open

From biomedical cloud platforms to microservices: Next steps in FAIR data and analysis

  • 1. University of Virginia
  • 2. Deloitte
  • 3. European Bioinformatics Institute
  • 4. University of Chicago
  • 5. Uppsala University

Description

The biomedical research community is investing heavily in biomedical cloud platforms. Cloud computing holds great promise for addressing challenges with big data and ensuring reproducibility in biology. However, despite their advantages, cloud platforms in and of themselves do not automatically support FAIRness. The global push to develop biomedical cloud platforms has led to new challenges, including platform lock-in, difficulty integrating across platforms, and duplicated effort for both users and developers. Here, we argue that these difficulties are systemic and emerge from incentives that encourage development effort on self-sufficient platforms and data repositories instead of interoperable microservices. We argue that many of these issues would be alleviated by prioritizing microservices and access to modular data in smaller chunks or summarized form. We propose that emphasizing modularity and interoperability would lead to a more powerful Unix-like ecosystem of web services for biomedical analysis and data retrieval. We challenge funders, developers, and researchers to support a vision to improve interoperability through microservices as the next generation of cloud-based bioinformatics.

Files

From-biomedical-cloud-platforms-to-microservices-next-steps-in-FAIR-data-and-analysis.pdf

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/s41597-022-01619-5
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:5195

Funding

National Institutes of Health Institute for General Medical Sciences
R35GM128636
Endowment from Scott and Beth Stephenson
European Molecular Biology Laboratory
Wellcome Trust
WT108749/Z/15/Z

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Center(s) or Institute(s)
Center for Translational Data Science