We are delighted to present a ring lecture and
seminar introducing students
to Modern
Bioinformatics. Please register early as the
course is often oversubscribed.
Bioinformatics is a particularly heterogeneous
discipline. Rather than only presenting basic material
in talks, the focus in this course is on different
lecturers showcasing exciting areas of research, modern
methods, and current challenges in the field. An aim is
to share our excitement with students by providing
insight into some of the most interesting and relevant
research challenges of these times. The course also
offers an invaluable opportunity for meeting several of
the key Bioinformatics group leaders in Vienna, and to
learn about institutes offering research opportunities
towards an M. Sc. thesis in Bioinformatics.
Guest lecturers will introduce the areas of their
respective research interests. Each lecture will
conclude with a recommendation of scientific papers for
further reading and discussion in the seminar.
After the initial lecture presentations, a selection of
papers and seminar days for presentations will be
provided online (below, updates to be announced during
the lectures).
You need to select your paper through an online
system and provide a critical discussion in the January
seminar (instructions will be announced in the lectures
and will appear below). Plan for 10-15 minutes of
presentation and 5 minutes for discussion. When you are
not presenting yourself, you are expected to actively
participate in the discussion.
Suggested papers and complementary materials
If you have any difficulties obtaining a copy of the manuscripts
from the journal web-page or the below links,
please contact us.
David Kreil – Quantitative and functional genomics
-
An unbiased comparison of hybridization and sequencing
based platforms for expression profiling that can
discriminate alternative transcripts and spliceforms from
the US National Institutes of Health in Bethesda:
Raghavachari et al. (2012)
A
systematic comparison and evaluation of high density
exon arrays and RNA-seq technology used to unravel the
peripheral blood transcriptome of sickle cell
disease. BMC Medical Genomics, 5,
28.
For additional background, see our paper
in Nature
Biotechnology, A comprehensive
assessment of RNA-seq accuracy, reproducibility and
information content by the Sequencing Quality Control
Consortium.
-
An integrated (and controversial?) analysis combining
measurements across multiple species from the lab of Ziv
Bar-Joseph at Carnegie Mellon University:
Lu et
al. (2007)
Combined
analysis reveals a core set of cycling genes.
Genome Biology 8, R146.
If you are interested in in learning about our research
interests, please browse
our
web-site or look at a compilation of
typical
research projects where you could get involved
(
contact us for updates).
If you want to take part in an exciting international data
analysis challenge, have a look
at
CAMDA and sign up
to
the
announcements
mailing list and check out the
contest data sets. Since 2017 CAMDA has
run as a full regular conference track of ISMB, the preeminent
bioinformatics conference worldwide.
Peter Sykacek – Probabilistic Methods in Bioinformatics
- J. Jumper et al.
(2021)
Highly
accurate protein structure prediction with
AlphaFold. Nature 596,
583–589.
- J. Abramson et al. (2024)
Accurate
structure prediction of biomolecular interactions with
AlphaFold 3. Nature 630,
493–500.
Lecture
notes (last updated 2016)
Thomas Rattei – Microbial Metagenomics
-
J. Shaw and Y. W. Yu
(2024)
Rapid
species-level metagenome profiling and containment
estimation with sylph.
Nature Biotech in print, doi:
10.1038/s41587-024-02412-y.
Lecture
notes (last updated 2024)
Christoph Flamm – Autocatalysis
-
M. G. Howlett, A. H.-J. Engwerda, and S. P. Fletcher
(2024)
Information transduction via fuel-controlled chemical waves.
Chem 10, 2861–2871.
-
M. Ter Harmsel, R. M. Oliver, S. A. Runikhina,
A. S. Y. Wong, W. T. S. Huck, S. R. Harutyunyan
(2023)
A
catalytically active oscillator made from small organic
molecules. Nature 621, 87–93.
-
M. G. Howlett, A. H.-J. Engwerda, R. J. H. Scanes, and S. P. Fletcher
(2022)
An autonomously oscillating supramolecular self-replicator.
Nature Chem 14 805–810
Lecture
notes (last updated 2024)
Chris Oostenbrink – Molecular dynamics simulations
- L. Casalino et al. (2020)
Beyond
Shielding: The Roles of Glycans in the SARS-CoV‐2 Spike Protein.
ACS Central Science, 6, 1722–1734.
>Binding Modes and Metabolism of Caffeine.
- C. Öhlknecht et al.
(2021)
Efficient in silico saturation mutagenesis of a member of the caspase protease family.
J. Chem. Inf. Model,
61, 1193–1203.
Lecture
notes (last updated 2022)
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