Skip Navigation National Human Genome Research InstituteNational Human Genome Research InstituteNational Human Genome Research InstituteNational Institutes of Health
     
Home | About NHGRI | Newsroom | Staff Directory
Research Grants Health Policy & Ethics Educational Resources Careers & Training
Division of Intramural Research

Overview
Organizational Chart
Research Branches
Cancer Genetics Branch
Genetic Disease Research Branch
Genetics & Molecular Biology Branch
Genome Technology Branch
Inherited Disease Research Branch
Medical Genetics Branch
Social and Behavioral Research Branch
Research Investigators
Profiles, publications, links
Clinical Research
Clinical trials, patient recruitment, IRB, FAQ, Overview
NHGRI Affiliated Centers
Online Research Resources Developed at NHGRI
Databases, software, tools, more.
Division of Intramural Research Calendar
Workshops, conferences, seminar series, courses, more.
Books and Publications



In Other Sections:

Research Training Opportunities

Intramural Training Office

Technology Transfer Office

Administrative Office




Home>Research>Intramural Research>Research Branches at NHGRI>Genome Technology Branch >Bouffard Lab


Gerard Bouffard

Gerard Bouffard, Ph.D.

Associate Investigator
Genome Technology Branch

Director
Bioinformatics Group
NIH Intramural Sequencing Center

B.S. University of Vermont, 1984
Ph.D. George Washington University, 1994
phone (301) 435-6154
fax (301) 435-6170
e-mail bouffard@nhgri.nih.gov
Advanced Technology Center
8717 Grovemont Circle, Room 152B
Gaithersburg, MD 20877
Selected Publications




NIH Intramural Sequencing Center [nisc.nih.gov]

The Mammalian Gene Collection [nci.nih.gov]

Hembase: Hematopoietic Cell Expression Database [niddk.nih.gov]

I direct the Bioinformatics Group at the NIH Intramural Sequencing Center (NISC), where my work centers on applying the latest information technologies to the data management and analysis needs of this expanding operation. One of my areas of interest is the design and implementation of a Laboratory Information Management System (LIMS) and its associated tools. Accurate sample tracking and rapid data analysis are critical to our mission, as our operation generates over 3000 bp of high quality DNA sequence per minute, 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

I am also involved in several collaborative projects. I wrote a series of programs to assist collaborating investigators in the analysis of Expressed Sequence Tags (ESTs) and genomic sequencing projects. I initiated the bioinformatics component of the local implementation of the Mammalian Gene Collection Program, which generates complete cDNA sequences for all human and mouse genes. I play an active role in the Comparative Genomic Sequencing Project.

My interest in Bioinformatics began at a time when searching all of GenBank meant first installing it from a handful of 5-inch floppy diskettes. As a graduate student, my work focused on database tracking of E.coli genomic sequence fragments. Closer study and sequencing of one of these fragments led to my discovery of two new genes, which I then characterized. Later, as a post-doctoral fellow, I managed and analyzed the data for the YAC-based STS mapping of human chromosome 7, a project that paved the way for this chromosome's sequencing in the Human Genome Project.

Top of page Top of page

Last Reviewed: September 2004




Print Version


Other Genome Technology Branch Investigators

Andy Baxevanis, Ph.D.

Robert W. Blakesley, Ph.D.

Lawrence C. Brody, Ph.D.

Shawn Burgess, Ph.D.

Settara C. Chandrasekharappa, Ph.D.

Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D.

Eric D. Green, M.D., Ph.D.

James C. Mullikin, Ph.D.

Tyra Wolfsberg, Ph.D.



PrivacyContactAccessibilitySite IndexStaff DirectoryHome Government LinksDepartment of Health and Human ServicesFirstGovNational Institutes of Health