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UTACCEL 2010 Adventures in Biotechnology Graham Cromar.

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UTACCEL 2010 Adventures in Biotechnology Graham Cromar
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Page 1: UTACCEL 2010 Adventures in Biotechnology Graham Cromar.

UTACCEL 2010

Adventures in Biotechnology

Graham Cromar

Page 2: UTACCEL 2010 Adventures in Biotechnology Graham Cromar.

Bioinformatics

Bioinformatics is about integrating biological themes together with the help of computer tools and biological databases, and gaining new knowledge from this.

Page 3: UTACCEL 2010 Adventures in Biotechnology Graham Cromar.

Sanger sequencing

Page 4: UTACCEL 2010 Adventures in Biotechnology Graham Cromar.

Automated Sequencing

In the past, the separation of the DNA strands by electrophoresis was a time consuming process. Today, fluorescent labels and new advances in gel electrophoresis have made DNA sequencing fast and accurate. Also, the process is almost fully automated, including the read out of the final sequence.

Page 5: UTACCEL 2010 Adventures in Biotechnology Graham Cromar.

Parallelizing Sequencing

Page 6: UTACCEL 2010 Adventures in Biotechnology Graham Cromar.

6Introduction 1.0

Genbank doubles every 14 months

(from the National Centre for Biotechnology Information)Shorter than Moore’s law (computer power doubling every 20 months!)

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7Introduction 1.0

Genomes Number of base pairs___________________________________________________________

1971 First published DNA sequence 121977 PhiX174 5,3751982 Lambda 48,5021992 Yeast Chromosome III 316,613 1995 Haemophilus influenza 1,830,138 1996 Saccharomyces 12,068,0001998 C. elegans 97,000,0002000 D. melanogaster 120,000,0002001 H. sapines (draft) 2,600,000,0002003 H. sapiens 2,850,000,000

Complexity does not always correlate with size. The largest genome known to date is the amoeba!

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The next step is to locate all of the genes and regulatory regions, describe their functions, and identify how they differ between different groups (i.e. “disease” vs “healthy”)… …bioinformatics plays a critical role

Storage, search, retrieval and visualization are key

Page 11: UTACCEL 2010 Adventures in Biotechnology Graham Cromar.

Bioinformatics will help with…….

Structure-Function Relationships

Can we predict the function of protein molecules from their sequence?sequence > structure > function

Prediction of some simple 3-D structures (a-helix, b-sheet, membrane spanning, etc.)

Page 12: UTACCEL 2010 Adventures in Biotechnology Graham Cromar.

12Introduction 1.0

BLAST Result

BasicLocalAlignmentSearchTool

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13Introduction 1.0

Micro-array analysis:

Figure 4Figure 1

Science Jan 1 1999: 83-87

The Transcriptional Program in the Response of Human Fibroblasts to Serum

Vishwanath R. Iyer, Michael B. Eisen, Douglas T. Ross, Greg Schuler, Troy Moore, Jeffrey C. F. Lee, Jeffrey M. Trent, Louis M. Staudt, James Hudson Jr., Mark S. Boguski, Deval Lashkari, Dari Shalon, David Botstein, Patrick O. Brown

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Genetic Analysis of Cancer in Families

The Genetic Predisposition to Cancer

PubMed Text Neighboring

• Common terms could indicate similar subject matter

• Statistical method• Weights based on term

frequencies within document and within the database as a whole

• Some terms are better than others

There are over 1 million papers published in the life sciences each year!

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15Introduction 1.0

Top 10 Future Challenges for Bioinformatics

Precise, predictive model of transcription initiation and termination: ability to predict where and when transcription will occur in a genome

Precise, predictive model of RNA splicing/alternative splicing: ability to predict the splicing pattern of any primary transcript in any tissue

Precise, quantitative models of signal transduction pathways: ability to predict cellular responses to external stimuli

Determining effective protein:DNA, protein:RNA and protein:protein recognition codes

Accurate ab initio protein structure prediction

Rational design of small molecule inhibitors of proteins

Mechanistic understanding of protein evolution: understanding exactly how new protein functions evolve

Mechanistic understanding of speciation: molecular details of how speciation occurs

Continued development of effective gene ontologies - systematic ways to describe the functions of any gene or protein

Education: development of appropriate bioinformatics curricula for secondary, undergraduate and graduate education

Page 16: UTACCEL 2010 Adventures in Biotechnology Graham Cromar.

Tutorial


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