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REVOLUTIONARY
SEQUENCING
TECHNOLOGIES & APPLICATIONS
July 6 - 17, 2008
Application Deadline: March 15, 2008
Instructors:
Elaine
Mardis, Washington University School of Medicine
Gabor
Marth, Boston College
W.
Richard McCombie, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
John
McPherson, Baylor College of Medicine
Michael
Zody, The Broad Institute
Over
the last decade, large scale DNA sequencing has markedly
impacted the practice of modern biology and is beginning
to effect the practice of medicine. With the recent introduction
of several revolutionary sequencing technologies, costs
and timelines have been reduced by orders of magnitude,
facilitating investigators to conceptualize and perform
sequencing-based projects that heretofore were prohibitive.
Furthermore, the application of these technologies to answer
questions previously not experimentally approachable is
broadening their impact and application.
This intensive twelve day course will explore applications
of next generation sequencing technologies, with a focus
on commercially available methods. Students will be instructed
in the detailed operation of several revolutionary sequencing
platforms, including sample preparation procedures, general
data handling through pipelines, and in-depth data analysis.
A diverse range of biological questions will be explored
including DNA re-sequencing of human genomic regions (using
cancer samples as a test case), de novo DNA sequencing of
bacterial genomes, and the use of these technologies in
studying small RNAs, among others. Guest lecturers will
highlight their own applications of these revolutionary
technologies.
We encourage applicants from a diversity of scientific backgrounds
including molecular evolution, development, neuroscience,
cancer, plant biology and microbiology.
Sponsored
by Applied
Biosystems, Illumina
and 454 Life
Sciences
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