EMBO Practical Course on Analysis of High-Throughput Sequencing Data

Date:

 Monday 20 Saturday 25 October 2014

Venue: 

European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI) - Wellcome Genome Campus, Hinxton, Cambridge,  CB10 1SD, United Kingdom

Application opens: 

Friday 18 April 2014

Application deadline: 

Friday 15 August 2014

Contact: 

Johanna Langrish

Registration closed

Overview

The aim of this course is to familiarise the participants with advanced data analysis methodologies and provide hands-on training on the latest analytical approaches. Lectures will give insight into how biological knowledge can be generated from High-throughput sequencing experiments and illustrate different ways of analyzing such data. Practicals will consist of computer exercises that will enable the participants to apply statistical methods to the analysis of sequencing data under the guidance of the lecturers and teaching assistants.

Audience

This course is aimed at advanced PhD students and post-doctoral researchers who are applying or planning to apply high throughput sequencing technologies and bioinformatics methods in their research. Familiarity with the technology and biological use cases of high throughput sequencing is required, as is some experience with R/Bioconductor.

Syllabus, tools and resources

During this course you will learn about:

  • High-throughput sequencing technology
  • Quality control of raw reads: FASTQC and fastx toolkit
  • Considerations on experiment design for ChIP-seq and RNA-seq
  • Read alignment to a reference genome: Bowtie and Tophat
  • File format conversion and processing
  • Peak calling: MACS, USeq and SISSR
  • Motif analysis: MEME
  • Quantification of expression and differential expression analysis and differential exon usage: R, DESeq, DEXSeq
  • Small non-coding RNA analysis: R, Reaper

Outcomes

After this course you should be able to: 

  • Understand the advantages and limitations of the high-throughput assays presented
  • Assess the quality of your datasets
  • Compare and apply appropriate short read aligners
  • Perform alignment and peak calling of ChIP-seq datasets
  • Perform alignment and quantification of expression for both small ncRNA and RNA-seq datasets
  • Understand the challenges of single cell sequencing analysis

Programme

Time Topic Trainer
Day 1 - Monday 20 October 2014
08:15 Registration
08:30 Overview of the course Gabriella Rustici
09:15 Lecture: Introduction to the high-throughput sequencing data analysis workflows, with examples from R Martin Morgan
10:15 Tea/Coffee break  
10:30 Lecture/Practical: Short read representation, manipulation and quality assessment Martin Morgan
11:30 Lecture/Practical: Genes and Genomes Martin Morgan
12:30 Lunch  
13:30 Lecture/Practical: Genes and Genomes (continued) Martin Morgan
14:00 Lecture: Mapping strategies for sequence reads Nils Koelling
15:00 Tea/Coffee break  
15:15 Practical: Mapping Nils Koelling
17:45 Q&A Session  
19:00 Dinner  
Day 2 - Tuesday 21 October 2014
09:00 Lecture: Representing and manipulating alignments Nicolas Delhomme
09:45 Pratical: Representing and manipulating alignments Nicolas Delhomme
10:30 Tea/Coffee break  
10:45 Practical: Representing and manipulating alignments Nicolas Delhomme
12:30 Lunch  
13:30 Lecture: Estimating expression over genes and exons Nicolas Delhomme
14:30 Practical: Estimating expression over genes and exons Nicolas Delhomme
15:30 Tea/Coffee break  
15:45 Practical: Discovering novel transcribed regions Nicolas Delhomme
16:30 Challenges and solutions working with new plant genomes Nathaniel Street
18:00 Q&A Session  
19:00 Dinner  
Day 3 - Wednesday 22 October 2014
09:00 Lecture: Differential expression Wolfgang Huber
10:00 Lecture: Alternative exon usage Wolfgang Huber
11:00 Tea/Coffee break
11:15 Lecture: Multiple testing John Marioni
12:30 Lunch
13:30 Practical: Differential expression with RNA seq Wolfgang Huber
15:30 Tea/Coffee break  
15:45 Practical: Differential expression with RNA seq Wolfgang Huber
17:30 Q&A Session  
19:00 Dinner  
 Day 4 - Thursday 23 October 2014
09:00 Lecture: Single cell sequencing John Marioni
10:00 Tea/Coffee break  
10:15 Lecture: Small non-coding RNA Analysis Anton Enright
11:30 Practical: Small non-coding RNA Analysis Enright's Lab
12:30 Lunch
13:30 Practical: Small non-coding RNA Analysis Enright's Lab
14:30 Q&A session  
15:00 Poster session 1 & Tea/Coffee break
17:00 Coach departs WTCC to Cambridge
19:30 College dinner, Cambridge
Day 5 - Friday 24 October 2014
09:00 Leture: Introduction to ChIP-Seq data and analysis Kathi Zarnack & Bori Gerle
10:00 Lecture: Peak-callers Kathi Zarnack & Bori Gerle
10:30 Tea/Coffee break  
10:45 Practical: Peak-callers Kathi Zarnack & Bori Gerle
12:30 Lunch  
13:30 Lecture: ChIP-Seq data analysis with Bioconductor Kathi Zarnack & Bori Gerle
14:30 Tea/Coffee break  
14:45 Practical: ChIP-Seq data analysis with Bioconductor Kathi Zarnack & Bori Gerle
17:00 Poster session II  
19:00 Dinner  
Day 6 - Saturday 25 October 2014
09:00 Lecture: Chromosome conformation in gene expression Bori Gerle & Elodie Darbo
09:30 Lecture: Introduction to HiC data analysis Bori Gerle & Elodie Darbo
10:00 Tea/Coffee break  
10:15 Practical: HiC data analysis in R Bori Gerle & Elodie Darbo
12:00 Lunch & Feedback