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ISCB News and Announcements

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

In this issue:

 

Welcome to the ISCB Career Compass!

The ISCB Career Compass is a monthly newsletter designed to support your professional growth!

Each issue of Career Compass will feature an informative article on career development topics such as job search strategies, CV optimization, and crafting a great elevator pitch. Additionally, we'll provide a spotlight selection of job postings from the ISCB Career Center.

Employers looking to enhance their job postings can upgrade their post to Career Compass status. This posting upgrade includes extended, 90-day visibility of the post and inclusion in the Career Compass newsletter in our Career Compass Featured Jobs section.

We hope you find the Career Compass to be a valuable resource in your career journey!

 

Career Compass Featured Jobs

 

Researcher, University of Oklahoma
Job description:
Advancements in single-cell genomic, including spatially-resolved techniques, are transforming our understanding of biology. We are seeking exceptional students and graduates to work on challenges and applications of these groundbreaking technologies, especially in the context of cancer immunology and immuno-modulation.

Whether your degree is in Biomedical Sciences, Biochemistry, Molecular and Cellular Biology, Bioinformatics, Computer Science, or Mathematics, if you are passionate about working at the intersection of biology and computation, interested in functional genomics and thrive in a highly collaborative and dynamic environment, this is the perfect PhD or PostDoc opportunity for you.

 Protein Engineering Data Scientist, IFF, United States California Palo Alto
Job description:
At IFF we are looking for an experienced machine learning oriented protein engineer. As part of our team, you will identify the state-of-the-art in data-driven methods for library design, adjust them to our purposes and help implement them for direct use in business projects.

In our team, machine learning staff, molecular biologists, biochemists, and automation hardware engineers work side-by-side. Improvements are deployed with minimal delay, and you can expect to have large impact on the value of our products.

As a Protein Engineering Data Scientist, you will help to define our design strategy and to implement it so that it seamlessly integrates with our high-throughput screening workflows

 PhD in Bioinformatics in Tropical Australia, James Cook University
Job descrption:
Successful PhD candidate will work with leading immunologists and bioinformaticians across Australia in networks including the Centre for Personalised Immunology (www.cpi.org.au) and CIRCA (www.garvan.org.au/research/collaborative-programs/circa). This project will utilise the latest in sequencing technologies (including single cell and long reads) to discover the genetic contribution to human immunological diseases. This PhD would help develop cutting edge bioinformatics workflows and through collaborations with the Garvan Institute of Medical Research to further our understanding of the progression of autoimmune disease.

 Brue Mitchell fellow, Queen's University
Job description:
We invite you to join our laboratory affiliated with Queen’s University, School of Medicine, and School of Computing. This prestigious Bruce Mitchell PhD fellowship offers an opportunity to work and receive training in computational methods and data analysis for studying the epigenetic mechanisms of cancer. The fellow is expected to collaborate closely with an experimental group from the Biology Department to elucidate the mechanisms of cancer mutations in histone and chromatin remodelers.

Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Computational Cancer Genomics, Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital
MGH Cancer Center, HMS Department of Biomedical Infomatics
Job description:
The Gülhan Lab is seeking multiple postdoctoral fellows to work on innovative computational methods in the research areas of interest of the lab.

Below is a list of example projects:

1. Mutational signature analysis:
Building innovative signature analysis methods addressing some of the limitations of existing approaches.

  • Improving accuracy and interpretability of signatures by deconvoluting their temporal and genomic locus dependence.

  • Applying these methods in large datasets and by building an effective multi-study discovery strategy.

  • Comprehensive characterization of genomic instability mechanisms and patient classification through multi-modal signature analysis methods.

2. Liquid biopsy tests with cell-free DNA:
Building a comprehensive set of algorithms for mutation, tumor detection and gene expression inference methods; Utilizing them in development of an early-cancer detection cell-free DNA test and studying drug resistance mechanisms.

  • High accuracy single-nucleotide variant and indel detection through the use of signatures and machine learning

  • Building fragmentomics model for improved CNV and tumor fraction inference

  • Enhanced tumor detection using mutations and fragmentomics jointly

  • Gene expression inference methods

3. Long read single-cell sequencing:
Developing tools for joint genome and transcriptome profiling and using it to study early cancer development mechanisms and dynamic shifts in cancer cell composition in pre-/post-treatment biopsies in patients treated with targeted therapies.

  • Calling copy number variants, single-nucleotide variants, and indels from long-read scRNA-seq data. Studying mutational processes and their intratumor heterogeneity

  • Multi-modal characterization of single cells to detect cancer cells in precursor lesions

  • Multi-modal characterization of changes in molecular characteristics of cellular composition of tumors in highly heterogeneous metastatic tumors

  • Studying haploinsufficiency of immune cells in DNA-repair gene mutation carriers

Postdocs will get the chance to be a part of supportive and inclusive communities such as the Bioinformatics team at the Krantz Family Center for Cancer Research at MGH and the Department of Biomedical Informatics at Harvard Medical School. They will work closely with clinical teams at the forefront of precision oncology. Additionally, we accommodate remote or hybrid positions.

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7 Strategies to Use in Your Job Search

 

Navigating a job search can be challenging, but it's also an opportunity for growth and new beginnings! Whether you're a recent graduate entering the workforce or a professional seeking a career change, an effective strategy can significantly improve your prospects. Below are 7 simple strategies that can improve your job search approach.

1. Establish Clear Goals and a Routine

An often overlooked piece of advice when looking for a job is to be clear on what your career goals are and what it is you really want in a job. For example, what are your salary requirements? What’s your preferred work setup (office or remote)? Thinking about the answers to these and similar questions will help you target the right opportunities.

Once you’re clear on what you’re looking for, create a job search routine (one that includes scheduled breaks). Set aside non-negotiable time each day or week for your job search tasks. And remember: There's no need to cram everything into one day, just keep those application deadlines in mind!

2. Build a Solid Online Presence

Before diving into your job search, ensure your LinkedIn profile is current—or create one if you don’t have one already!

Start engaging on the platform by posting, sharing content, and commenting. Use LinkedIn to highlight your expertise and lessons learned from grad school or your career. Follow companies you're interested in and professionals in your industry that you admire, and regularly interact with their posts to boost your visibility!

Quick tip: Keeping your LinkedIn profile up to date may not seem important, but don’t neglect it! Many employers and hiring managers frequently check LinkedIn profiles and compare them to resumes they’ve received. A strong presence here can give you a competitive edge in your job search!

3. Networking

Networking will always be helpful in a job search! A few great ways to network include:

  • Leveraging your connections. Ask those in your network to be your job-hunting allies! Rally friends and colleagues to be your eyes and ears in the job market.

  • Attending industry events. These events are your backstage pass to company cultures and jobs in the hidden market.

  • Joining professional organizations. Being part of a professional organization or society (like ISCB!) can provide access to exclusive job boards and boost your industry credibility.

  • Conducting informational interviews. These casual chats can provide company insights and job leads not posted publicly.

  • Updating your LinkedIn status. Sharing your career aspirations and job search status on this platform can turn your profile into a job-seeking beacon.

4. Utilize Job Search Sites and Company Websites

While networking will always be a crucial step in your job search, don't overlook traditional job search sites (e.g. Glassdoor, Indeed, LinkedIn). Even if you don’t find the perfect match there, searching on these sites might help narrow down what you are looking for and help you solidify your career goals.

You can also check directly on company websites to see what job postings may be advertised there and that might not be on public job sites. It might be helpful, too, to follow companies you want to work for on social media to see any posts about open positions!

5. Focus on the Hidden Job Market

Simply put, the hidden job market encompasses those jobs that aren’t publicly advertised by employers. These jobs may be filled internally, or external candidates may be found by employee referral programs (read: networking) or through recruitment agencies.

To find this job market on your own, carve out some time in your job search schedule to research companies you'd be interested in working for and reach out directly to inquire about potential job openings. You never know unless you ask!

6. Tailor Your Applications

A generic resume and cover letter won’t stand out, so for each application you submit, make sure you’re customizing your resume and cover letter! Highlight the skills and experiences you have that are relevant to and align with the job for which you’re applying. Taking the time to do this will help show employers and hiring managers that you’ve read and understand the job description and that you’re genuinely interested in the position.

7. Prepare for Interviews

You did it! You got the interview—but your work isn’t finished yet! Preparation is key here.

Prior to your interview, research the company, practice common interview questions, and prepare questions to ask your interviewer. This preparation can help you make a strong impression and increase your chances of landing the job!

Final Thoughts

Keeping these strategies in mind and implementing them as you embark on your job search will help you maximize your opportunities by keeping your job search focused and your goals clear!

 

Sources not linked above:

Kowalska, K. (2022, October 19). 10 Essential Job Search Strategies to Help Land Your Next Big Gig. HubSpot.

          https://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/job-search strategy

Indeed Editorial Team. (2021, February 22). 12 Job Searching Strategies That Work. Indeed.

          https://www.indeed.com/career-advice/finding-a-job/job-searching-strategies

Lowe-MacAuley, K. (2023, August 2). 30 Powerful and Effective Job Search Strategies That Get Results. FlexJobs.

          https://www.flexjobs.com/blog/post/20-effective-job-search-strategies-that-get-results/

 
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If you’re hoping to take part in the ISCB-Latin America SoIBio CCBCOL Conference on Bioinformatics happening in Medellín, Colombia, there are two abstract deadlines coming up.

For those seeking attendance fellowships, abstracts must be submitted by Monday, August 5.

The final abstract submission deadline is Friday, September 6.

Don't miss your chance to be part of this exciting event! Click the button below to submit your abstract now!

Submit Now
 
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From the Asian Student Council Symposium 2024 Chairs:

We invite you to submit abstracts to the 3rd Asian Student Council Symposium (#ASCS2024) is an exciting event that aims to provide a platform for undergraduate and graduate students and early career researchers to present their work to an international audience, build a network within the vibrant community, and develop soft skills in an environment that fosters theexchange of ideas and knowledge.

The symposium will take place in hybrid mode for the very first time, as a pre-conference event of the Asia & Pacific Bioinformatics Joint Conference (#APBJC2024), on 22nd October 2024 in Okinawa, Japan.

It will bring together leading experts in the fields of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology through keynote talks of Prof. Kiyoshi Asai (University of Tokyo, Japan) & Dr. Heejung Shim (University of Melbourne, Australia), a panel discussion on "BioinformaticsBeyond Borders: Enhancing Global Collaborations and Data Accessibility" besides hosting exciting competitions as well as talks by students and early career researchers in the form of oral, poster, and flash talk presentations.  

Follow our updates through our website, and social media handles.

Our event is a unique opportunity for participants to gain valuable insight from fellow researchers, establish a network, and learn about cutting-edge research in the field.

 Call for Submissions:
Become a partof this exciting symposium and submit your research abstract here.
Deadline: 5th August 2024

Registration:
Whether you’re attending in person or virtually, registration is mandatory. You can register through #APBJC's registration system.

For further details, please visit our website here or contact us at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 
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This is a friendly reminder that Friday, August 2 is a dual deadline for RSGDREAM:

 RSG

  • Abstracts Submission Deadline (for talks and posters) (You have until 11:59 p.m. Any Time Zone)

Submit Now!

DREAM Challenges

  • Poster only submission deadline (You have until 11:59 p.m. Any Time Zone)

DREAM Challenges

Don’t miss your chance to be part of RSGDREAM’s 16th annual multidisciplinary event focusing on computational methods in regulatory and systems genomics, and related areas of systems and network biology!

 
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Proceedings paper submissions for the ISCB-LATAM special issue of Bioinformatics Advances are due this Thursday, July 25!

The Bioinformatics Advances journal will consider publishing a special issue featuring peer-reviewed articles from the ISCB-LATAM conference!

The journal will review submitted papers and provide feedback. Authors will have one month to respond to comments. Exceptional papers will be highlighted in featured talks at the conference.

Note: Authors are responsible for the processing charges associated with the publication of their proceedings paper.

Submit Now!
 
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Looking for the next conference to attend?

Check out some of the options on the flyer below. And remember: ISCB members get discounts on each of the conferences listed!

Find out more
 
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July 16: ISMB Day 5 Highlights and Recap

On Day 5 of the conference, with 7 COSI tracks, 3 special sessions, and a fantastic closing keynote address, we’ve wrapped up ISMB for another year!

Thank you for being part of the world's largest conference on bioinformatics and computational biology. We hope you enjoyed your time in Montréal and the five days of science, networking, and discussion that ISMB 2024 brought!

 

Keynote Address

The final day of the ISMB 2024 conference was closed with a keynote talk from this year’s ISCB Innovator Award winner, Dr. Su-In Lee, entitled “Explainable AI for Biomedical Sciences: Where We Are and How to Move Forward.”

Dr. Lee’s talk reviewed the significance of explainable AI (XAI) in biomedical sciences, its advancements, and future directions, and she discussed the importance of working in the ABC fields—AI, basic biology, and clinical medicine—highlighting the critical need for AI models that not only predict outcomes accurately but also explain the reasoning behind their predictions.

Dr. Lee’s presentation also addressed SHAP (SHapley Additive exPlanations), which unifies a large portion of the explainable AI literature and addresses computational complexity through various optimization techniques. She also discussed how XAI improves healthcare providers' ability to predict clinical outcomes, citing examples such as predicting hypoxemia events during surgeries and estimating biological age using the ENABL (ExplaiNAble BioLogical) Age clock.

XAI's applications in neurodegenerative disease research were reviewed, particularly Alzheimer's disease, demonstrating how it can enhance data-driven discovery and identify potential therapeutic targets. As well, the importance of biologically interpretable AI modeling and contrastive modeling in improving interpretability, especially in single-cell datasets, was highlighted.

Furthermore, Dr. Lee’s presentation addressed the role of XAI in auditing AI models, reviewing work from her lab that revealed shortcuts in COVID-19 detection models and improving skin cancer prediction. Her talk introduced novel solutions, including generating counterfactual images and using image-text foundation models grounded in medical literature.

The keynote address concluded by discussing future directions for XAI in biomedicine, emphasizing the need for concept-based explanations, explainable AI for foundation and generative models, and AI auditing specific to biomedical applications. Dr. Lee stressed the importance of convergence across all modalities in future medicine and the critical role of XAI in validating model decisions and uncovering underlying biological mechanisms.

Before questions about her talk, Dr. Lee left the crowd at ISMB with her thoughts about receiving the ISCB Innovator Award and the responsibility she feels being added to prestigious list of other Innovator Award winners. Notably, she said, “The true goal of research and science is to expand the boundaries of human knowledge.” This powerful and inspiring message was a perfect note on which to end the conference!

 

Session Recaps

BOSC

This was the 25th anniversary of the Bioinformatics Open Source Conference (BOSC; open-bio.org/events/bosc), which started at ISMB 2000 in San Diego. As usual, BOSC began with a welcome from chair Nomi Harris, followed by an overview of BOSC’s parent organization, the Open Bioinformatics Foundation, by OBF Treasurer Heather Wiencko. The opening session also included a plug for the post-BOSC CollaborationFest (https://www.open-bio.org/events/bosc-2024/obf-bosc-collaborationfest-2024/), a free, collaborative work event (including but not limited to hacking) hosted by the nearby University of Quebec (UQAM). All are welcome to register, whether or not you are attending BOSC.

BOSC’s packed first-day schedule included sessions focusing on various topics in open science and open source bioinformatics, including Data Analysis, Open Data, Visualization, and Developer Tools and Libraries. The first keynote was delivered by Mélanie Courtot; her topic was "The Data Shows We Need Better Data". Dr. Courtot began with a brief overview of her career, with the underlying message that changes bring opportunity. She then discussed how we need better standards and metadata in order to make sense of the data and share it internationally to address global challenges. She noted that there is an extensive ecosystem of open data, open standards, and open source software that researchers can leverage to help free more time to focus on the interesting science. Most of us are aware of the FAIR (Findable/Accessible/Interoperable/Reusable) data principles; Dr. Courtot went beyond FAIR to discuss the TRUE principles (Tracked, Reasonable, Understandable, Ethical) that are particularly important for preparing AI-Ready data.

The second day of BOSC 2024 opened with a session covering a topic close to our hearts, “Standards and frameworks for open science.” Afterward, keynote speaker Andrew Su discussed "Open Data, Knowledge Graphs, and Large Language Models." Dr. Su asked, "Have LLMs obviated the need for structured knowledge?" (Spoiler alert: No!) He discussed ways to reduce hallucination using Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) and tool augmentation, as well as benchmarks for evaluating AI-generated answers and explanations. Dr. Su then led participants (both in person and virtual) in several episodic future thinking exercises, with scenarios that elicited responses to investigate how our community feels about the future of AI/LLMs in biomedical informatics. The results, in the form of word clouds and polls, revealed ambivalence between excitement and concern.

BOSC ended with a panel, "Open Source AI/ML: A Game Changer for Bioinformatics?”, with panelists Larry Hunter, Thomas Hervé Mboa Nkoudou, Mélanie Courtot, and Andrew Su. Addressing whether we should switch to using open models, Larry Hunter answered emphatically, “Absolutely.” “It’s difficult to investigate sources of bias in the training data,” he pointed out, “if you can’t see the data.” Not only do we not know what’s in closed models, but we can be pretty sure they’re not acting in our best interests as researchers since the payoff for commercial AI is more targeted advertising (for example, advertisers pay to have their content used in the training data), which is no way to do science. There was a spirited discussion about data privacy vs. openness, with Mélanie Courtot pointing out that we don’t yet have a clear understanding of the benefit vs. harm that may be incurred by sharing data such as personal medical information. Andrew Su noted that bioinformaticians who were surveyed  varied widely in their level of comfort  with sharing their health information with an LLM tool.Moderator Monica Munoz-Torres closed by asking the panelists, “Do you think open-source models are a game changer for bioinformatics?” Panelist Thomas Mboa did not hesitate to answer “Yes!”

Thank you to everyone who helped make BOSC 2024 a success. We hope to see you again in 2025!

 

CAMDA

Wenzhong Xiao, Director of the Immuno-Metabolic Computational Center of Harvard Medical School, introduced the CAMDA Competition Series in its 2-day conference track at ISMB 2024, giving an overview and insights from a historical perspective.

Cathy Lozupone, University of Colorado, kicked off the microbiome session to a packed house, illustrating  how metabolic network modelling of time series allows predictions about successional turnover, discussing possible mechanisms reflecting adaptation to oxidative stresses. Her studies demonstrated the relationship between microbiomes in diseased adults and those of infants, highlighting parallels to processes that occur in primary versus secondary ecological succession, where absence of a complex community of healthy gut commensals allows for a colonization of opportunistic, early succession adapted organism that undergo an ordered turnover of membership. Coupling co-occurrence patterns and longitudinal analyses of dense time-series data with genomic and metabolic network interrogations to explore underlying drivers of microbial cooperation and competition, Dr Lozupone and her team have been generating hypotheses regarding important interactions that occur during succession and subsequently tested them successfully in humanized mice.

Then Kinga Zielińska, Małopolska Centre of Biotechnology Krakow, introduced the dataset and Health Index underlying this year’s CAMDA microbiome data analysis challenge. She presented a baseline analysis, demonstrating that a novel Health Index introduced at CAMDA that focuses on microbiome functions rather than taxonomies proves to be more sensitive to detecting differences between healthy controls and a large variety of diseases, while also being robust to sequencing depth.

The subsequent session show-cased advances by the different teams tackling the CAMDA microbiome challenge. First up, Nelly Selem Mojica, Centro de Ciencias Matemáticas UNAM, presented an approach for Integrating Taxonomic and Functional Features for Gut Microbiome Health Indexing. Introducing a novel Random Forest GMHI index that integrates both taxonomic and functional data from the microbiome, this established a more robust and accurate framework for predicting health outcomes.

Using Gradient Boosting to Predict Health States from Composition and Function of the Gut Microbiome, Patrick Smyth, National Microbiology Laboratory Canada, constructed a Gradient Boost Health Index from gut Microbiome data (GBHIM), showing improved performance over existing indices like the Gut Microbiome Health Index (GMHI) across various validation folds and data sets, highlighting its potential for accurate health state predictions.

Finally, Zuzanna Karwowska, Małopolska Centre of Biotechnology, presented a Microbiome time series analysis revealing predictable patterns of change. Despite high volatility, the human gut microbiome shows stable features over time, and changes can be predicted based solely on previous states. She presented a statistical characterization of the unique temporal behaviors of individual bacterial species. Furthermore, she identify distinct longitudinal regimes in which bacteria exhibit specific patterns of behavior. Cluster analysis identified groups of bacteria that exhibit coordinated fluctuations over time. These findings contribute to our understanding of the dynamic nature of the gut microbiome and its potential implications for human health.

Closing the CAMDA microbiome session, Jesse Shapiro, McGill University, gave an overview of challenges and promising approaches for predictions in microbiome science. Discussing an analysis of several distinct biomes, the limited sizes of microbiome data still make predictions further into the future a hard challenge, and more complex outcomes remain difficult to model. Expert domain knowledge is thus particularly crucial in navigating and exploring microbial datasets.

In the last session of the day, a diverse set of complementary talks covered as diverse topics as Security Vulnerabilities of Portable Sequencing Devices (Carson Stillman, U Florida), genomic epidemiology of Giardia intestinalis ( Miguel Prieto, Simon Fraser), inverted Repeats in Viral Genomes at a Large Scale (Madhavi Ganapathiraju, Carnegie Mellon Qatar), and the Integration of Spatial Transcriptomics into Multimodal Imaging of Skin Aging (Christina Bauer, Medical University Vienna).

In an analysis of hundreds of millions of electronic Health Records, in his early morning keynote kicking off the second day of CAMDA, Andrey Rzhetsky (U Chicago) conclusively demonstrated the massive effects of air quality on a range of diseases, including depression and bipolar disorder. Strikingly, while access to natinoal data remains challenging and requires separate analyses in collaboration with scientists in each country, data from US health systems / insurance is compiled and brokered commercially.

Joaquin Dopazo, Director of the Computational Medicine Platform at the Health Ministry of Andalusia, then discussed the challenges and opportunities in the analysis of electronic Health Records and introduced the CAMDA Clinical Health Record Challenge of tracing diabetes patient disease trajectories.

The following session explored first analyses of the challenge data. Daniel Santana-Quinteros, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, discussed results from cluster analyses in the context of diagnosing and managing Type 2 diabetes, with better predictive models supporting more personalized and proactive healthcare interventions. Daniel Voskergian, Al-Quds University, reported a novel approach to feature engineering, combining XGB feature selection with various supervised machine learning algorithms, incl. Random Forest, XGBoost, LogitBoost, AdaBoost, and Decision Trees to develop predictive models for four complications of diabetes mellitus: retinopathy, chronic kidney disease, ischemic heart disease, and amputations. Both teams highlighted a need for extended health records and independent validation cohorts.

Paweł Łabaj, Małopolska Centre of Biotechnology, introduced the CAMDA challenge on Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) contributed by the team of Leonid Chindelevitch, Imperial College London. The following session reported exploratory work on the data. Alper Yurtseven, Helmholtz Institute for Pharmaceutical Research, compared GWAS results to The Comprehensive Antibiotic Resistance Database. Interestingly, phylogenetic scores showed better performance. Jaime Salvador López Viveros, CCM UNAM Mexico, reported a comparison of various preprocessing and dimensionality reduction and modelling approaches applied to diverse subsets of the data. The best predictions were obtained from AMR gene counts by L1-regularized logistic regression.

The data challenge sessions were then complemented by a discussion of open issues in the benchmarking of single cell data clustering by Owen Visser, University of Florida, and an ISMB proceedings contribution by Dexiong Chen, Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, who introduced a sparse, interpretable, and optimized maximum mean discrepancy test (SpInOpt-MMD) for two-sample testing and feature selection in the same experiment. SpInOpt-MMD performed well on a variety of data types even on small cohorts, outperforming other methods such as SHapley Additive exPlanations and univariate association analysis.

Delegates then voted to select the best presentations for the CAMDA 2024 Awards:
1. Patrick Smyth, National Microbiology Laboratory Canada, for ‘Using Gradient Boosting to Predict Health States from Composition and Function of the Gut Microbiome’
2. Zuzanna Karwowska, Małopolska Centre of Biotechnology Kraków, for ‘Microbiome time series data reveal predictable patterns of change’
3. Nelly Selem Mojica, Centro de Ciencias Matemáticas UNAM Mexico, for ‘Integrating Taxonomic and Functional Features for Gut Microbiome Health Indexing’
With honorable mentions going to Jaime Salvador López Viveros, CCM UNAM Mexico (‘Machine learning models for AMR prediction’) and Owen Visser, University of Florida (‘Measures for the Evaluation of Clustering Methods on Single Cell Data’).

The CAMDA 2025 Challenges will be advertised in the coming months, and we look forward to welcoming submissions until May 2025 and see you all at ISMB in Liverpool, celebrating a quarter of a century of open-ended data analysis competitions at the cutting edge of complex big data in the life sciences.

 

Digital Agriculture

The Digital Agriculture Open Science session (or special session, use your favorite) kicked off with a keynote byEtienne Lord from Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada. Dr. Lord talked about current and new development in Digital Agriculture, and the implications of deep learning and robotics in this new data science. Dr. Lord highlighted the exciting application of digital instruments and analysis methods that are emerging in agriculture.

 The session had presentations on video analyses for animal welfare, single-plant omics, precision dairy farming, smart aquaculture, profitability maps for precision mapping, and salt tolerant protein classification with natural language models.

 Furthermore, the audience engaged in a discussion over current and future challenges in digital agriculture, focusing on automation, robotics and protocol standardization.

 

EvolCompGen

The EvolCompGen COSI was split across Days 4 and 5. We hosted a total of 30 talks, including 4 proceedings, ~40 posters, and 1 panel discussion to conclude our session. Researchers from around the world introduced several innovative methods and applications across evolutionary biology and comparative genomics. These included algorithms for solving problems in ncRNA families with novel distance metrics and dynamics of miRNAs, a progressive supertree algorithm for inferring transcript phylogenies, and a new representation for phylogenetic trees improving efficiency and comparison metrics. Other contributions encompassed automated pipelines for species tree inference from raw genome assemblies, alternative tests for molecular adaptation across genomes, and protein structure-based classifications enhancing orthology inference. Novel tools were also developed for inferring mitochondrial clones, cell lineage trees and modeling heteroplasmy, detecting genetic overlap in cancer progression, and reconstructing evolutionary histories using synteny and species trees. Machine learning approaches and scalable algorithms further improved phylogenetic tree reconstructions and comparative genomics, contributing significantly to the field. We also heard about exciting applications in tumor evolution, pseudogenes and plasmid mobility, antibiotic resistance, and host specificity. Our final session hosted a panel discussion to highlight the ongoing debates, open questions in the field, and cutting-edge methods that could seamlessly cross-pollinate across fields. How do we bring together the best of all worlds, spanning big data to ML to deep evolutionary insights? 

Overall, our sessions were very well-attended (in person and via Juno), with ample time after each presentation to discuss a few enlightening questions. We also enjoyed an evening out with a pleasant dinner with 40+ COSI members at "Les 3 Brasseurs" on a lively street in Old Montreal. We thank all the organizing committee, and all the in-person and virtual attendees for their patience and participation as we conclude our 2024 EvolCompGen program! Stay tuned for announcements on the (non-proceedings) talk and poster winners. We also welcome you to join our EvolCompGen COSI community and the 2025 planning/organizing committee via Twitter/X:@EvolComp, Website:evolcompgen.org, or Slack: bit.ly/join_evolcompgen. We look forward to seeing you in Liverpool in 2025!

 

SysMod

-The 2024 edition featured 2 keynote talks, 7 regular talks, 2 lightning talks, and 25 posters, with more than 200 attendees participating both in person and virtually.
-We opened our session with our first keynote speaker Prof. Nathan Price from Thorne HealthTech and Buck Institute for Research on Ageing, to discuss the role of the microbiome in predicting the onset of disease conditions such as obesity, diabetes, and neurodegenerative diseases. 
-The 9 talks have demonstrated the synergy between systems biology and bioinformatic approaches, featuring computational approaches ranged across agent-based, Boolean, dynamic, network-based, and non-linear differential equations models, also highlighting the relevance of modeling using single-cell data and spatial transcriptomics.
-We closed our session with our second keynote speaker, Prof. Melissa Kemp from the Georgia Tech, to discuss about a critical role of intercellular transport, adhesion, and cell cycle asynchrony in the propagation of dynamic patterning in engineered cells.
-We awarded three posters that developed on challenges in the systems biology community: using constraint-metabolic modeling to identify metabolic changes in disease and infection, and developing a computational platform to simulate cell state transitions in single-cell RNA-seq data.

 

TransMed

We had a very exciting day of talks spanning very diverse areas of biology and biomedicine. The day started with Prof. Heidi Rehm’s keynote, who gave a very insightful account of strategies to identify genetic drivers of rare diseases as well as building innovative approaches to global data sharing through initiatives like AnVIL and the Global Alliance for Genomics and Health. Prof. Rehm also addressed novel approaches to support genetics and genomics in medical practice. 

Our second keynote speaker, Dr. Quaid Morris gave a brilliant talk describing  the GDD-ENS, a highly accurate cancer type classifier deployed at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center based on inputs derived from an FDA-approved, and routinely applied, targeted DNA sequencing panel called MSK-IMPACT. Dr. Morris dicussed the functionality, the successes and some areas of improvement for GDD-ENS as well as the ongoing efforts to generalize GDD-ENS to other targeted cancer gene panels. In the second part of his talk, Dr Morris introduced a new framework for more interpretable mutational signatures which can be linked with pathway activity, thereby augmenting our understanding of cancer evolution.

The TransMed meeting included a series of excellent talks selected from abstracts, covering newly developed statistical and AI methods as well as applications of existing computational methods to diverse biomedical datasets for the purpose of disease diagnosis, biomarker identification, cell state identification, mapping spatial landscapes, understanding treatment resistance or clinical trial matching. This year, we introduced the Poster Flash Talk session where 8 selected posters were presented briefly, before the poster session during the lunch. This was a very dynamic session and we thank to all speakers for respecting the time allocated.

As highlighted by all of today’s speakers, we face increasing analytical and computing challenges when integrating increasingly complex datasets and translating them in the clinic, and there is a clear opportunity for computational, statistical and AI methods to transform the field of translational medicine in the coming years.

 
 

ISMB 2024 On-Demand

Remember that sessions have been recorded (with author permissions) and will be part of the on-demand library on Nucleus.

After the conference, we will work to edit the live session recordings into individual videos. As registered participants of this event, you will have exclusive access to the conference content and will be able to log in at any time to view a recording of any talks you missed or ones you’d like see again!

 

Voting is open until Friday, July 19!

 
 
 
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July 15: ISMB Day 4 Recap

On our second last day of ISMB 2024, the schedule was as full as ever, with 8 COSI tracks, the General Computational Biology track, more Technology Track presentations, and 2 special sessions, including the Equity and Diversity in Computational Biology Research session, and the WEB 2024 session on Experiential Learning on How to Implement AI in Bioinformatics Training.

In addition, this evening was also when the ISCB Town Hall was held, allowing conference participants to learn about the latest programs and initiatives from ISCB, as well as upcoming conferences. At this meeting, they were also able to provide feedback and suggestions to help shape the future of the society.

**Please make sure to read the “Important Notes” section below.**

 

Keynote Address

Dr. Martin Steinegger, the 2024 ISCB Overton Prize Award winner, kicked off day four of ISMB 2024 with his keynote address entitled, “Supercharged Protein Analysis in the Era of Accurate Structure Prediction,” in which he focused on accelerating biological science through fast, open-source methods, the main mission of his lab.

He then went on to introduce MMseq2, an ultrafast and sensitive sequence comparison tool that achieves an unmatched tradeoff in speed versus sensitivity, crucial for annotating difficult cases. The Big Fantastic Database (BFD), a huge protein reference catalog, was highlighted for its enormous diversity and utility in searching for newly discovered proteins.

A significant focus of Dr. Steinegger’s talk was on recent advancements in protein structure prediction, notably AlphaFold2—an accurate predictor of protein structures that uses multiple sequence alignments (MSA) of homologous proteins. Dr. Steinegger then introduced Foldseek, a groundbreaking tool for ultra-fast searching and clustering of protein structures. This tool encodes structures as sequences by discretizing tertiary interactions, allowing for rapid searches across billions of structures with high sensitivity and alignment quality comparable to TMalign, but significantly faster.

Dr. Steinegger concluded with a discussion of clustering protein structures and analyzing the protein universe using MMseq2 and Foldseek. This analysis revealed that 35% of clusters lack annotation, with known proteins tending to cluster together. He also touched on Foldseek-multimer, which addresses the problem of chain mapping in multichain alignments.

Dr. Steinegger concluded his talk by stating that while sequence analysis remains fundamental to protein structure studies, new structural tools are now supercharging this analysis, opening up exciting possibilities in biological research!

 

 

Quick reminder that tomorrow, July 16, there will be an LGBTQI+ lunch meetup. Grab your lunch from the poster hall and head to room 523b!

 

Session Recaps

 

NetBio

We had an exciting full-day program at the NetBio session.

 Morning Session: A Dynamic Start
The NetBio session today began with an inspiring keynote by Anne-Claude Gingras, who presented her work on "Using proximity-dependent biotinylation to understand dynamic cell organization." Gingras showcased approaches for studying the spatial and temporal aspects of protein interactions within cells, providing invaluable insights into subcellular organization and dynamics.

Merel Kuijs continued the program with her presentation of their proceedings paper on the GraphCompass (10.1093/bioinformatics/btae242). After two selected talks on network approaches for MS proteomics data, we had our first NetBio poster session over lunch with lots of discussions and networking.

Afternoon Session: Bridging Disciplines
The afternoon session opened with Chao Deng presenting their proceeding paper (10.1093/bioinformatics/btae257) on candidate gene identification using hypergraph neural networks. The following selected talks covered topics around link prediction, multi-layer networks, machine learning, and protein sequenced-based LLMs.

Dongmin Bang highlighted their approaches for drug response prediction described in their proceeding paper (10.1093/bioinformatics/btae249) before we concluded our session with a fantastic keynote by Patrick Aloy on “Blending Biology, Chemistry and AI through network embeddings”.

 What’s coming up
Don’t forget to stop by the second half of the NetBio posters tomorrow during the lunch break! We are also excited that our best talk and poster prizes will be announced during the ISMB2024 award presentation session on Tuesday afternoon.

 Thank you
A big thank you to all presenters, both for their talks and posters, for their invaluable contributions to the success of today's session. Special thanks to the COSI organizing team for putting together an exciting program highlighting the diverse applications of network biology ranging from novel methods and innovative research applications to important tools and resources that advance the field. Also, a thank you to the technical support staff at the conference and the ISCB staff that is always ready to help.

TransMed

We kicked off our TransMed meeting at ISMB 2024 this afternoon! Reinhard Schneider (University of Luxembourg) presented brief updates of our community since the previous edition and introduced the current meeting that will run until tomorrow afternoon. This year, we will have a new session dedicated to Poster Flash Talks, 12 - 12.20pm tomorrow. Today, we had two proceedings (TA-RNN: https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btae264 and PhiHER2: https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btae236) and three selected talks covering methods and tools for cancer research, including the eHDPrep package for electronic health data preparation, identification of candidate drugs for repurposing for breast cancer and investigation of the impact of clinically relevant gene fusions in head and neck cancer. We thank all our speakers and participants and we are looking forward to continuing tomorrow with our keynotes, selected and flash talks as well as with the poster presentations.

 

Important Notes

POSTERS
All posters must be taken down by 3pm tomorrow, Tuesday, July 16.

LUGGAGE
We do not have a supervised luggage check this year.

If you’re leaving right after the conference and your hotel is nearby, you can ask the staff at the front desk of your hotel if they can hold your luggage for you. If your hotel isn’t nearby, you will be able to place your luggage in the space to the left of the registration desk, but note that neither ISCB event staff nor the Palais staff will be responsible for your luggage.

LOST ITEMS
If you’ve lost something while attending sessions during the conference, please visit the ISMB registration desk as many lost items have been dropped off there.

TRANSPORTATION TO THE AIRPORT
Bus:
The 747 Express bus will take you from the Station Place D’Armes (accessible on the 1st floor of the Palais de congrès de Montréal) to the Montréal Airport (YUL).

From the city of Montréal’s website regarding 747 bus travel:

Don’t miss this step! Whether you’re leaving the airport or going to the airport, it’s best to get your ticket before boarding. At the airport, buy a ticket at one of the four vending machines in the international arrivals area. If you’re downtown, visit any of the Métro stations. You can pay in cash, by debit card, or with VISA or MasterCard credit card. You will need the 24-hour ticket, which currently costs $11. (Note: it is possible to purchase a ticket on board, but you’ll need exact fare: $11 in coins.)”

Ride Share: If you want to travel by Uber to the airport, consider the ‘Share’ option to lower travel expenses, or connect with other conference attendees and split the fare for an Uber or taxi.

 

Coming Up Tomorrow, Tuesday, July 16

Abridged Agenda
Detailed Agenda
 
 
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July 14: ISMB Day 3 Highlights and Recap

 

Day 3 of ISMB 2024 started before all the hustle and bustle for some of our attendees who rose bright and early to join the Serene Stretch Symposium in Level 2, Hall Viger.

The rest of the day kept everyone busy  with 10 COSI tracks, 2 special sessions, and the Success Circle networking event  

that allowed those in attendance to connect with thought leaders in the field.

 

Keynote Address

Our Day 3 keynote address was given by Dr. Guillaume Bourque with his talk entitled, “Human Genome 2.0: Why a Pangenome Graph is Better for Genetic and Epigenetic Analyses.”  His talk started with an overview of the motivation for genomic analyses, emphasizing the limitations encountered in mapping reads to a reference genome due to genetic diversity within populations, which can lead to sequences being ignored or incorrectly mapped, ultimately introducing reference bias.

To address the limitations, Dr. Bourque discussed the use of pangenome graphs that represent the shared segments of individual genomes and capture both common sequences and structural variants. Despite the human genome being mostly linear, these graphs encode genetic diversity and provide a more comprehensive representation.

Dr. Bourque emphasized that the timing for adopting genome graphs is ideal due to advancements in long-read sequencing technology, improved genome assembly methods, and the recent release of the first draft human pangenome reference. This reference, containing 47 phased, diploid assemblies from diverse individuals, has revealed significant additional genomic content and variation in haplotype structure. The pangenome approach has shown improvements in variant calling, reducing errors in small variant discovery by 34% and boosting structural variant detection by 104% when using short reads.

The keynote address also covered the application of pangenome graphs in epigenetic analyses, particularly in ChIP-seq studies. Additionally, the pangenome approach has identified millions of additional CpGs, expanding our understanding of the epigenome. Dr. Bourque concluded by highlighting the opportunities presented by the new pangenome reference, including exploring new biological questions, developing novel algorithms, and building tools for annotation and visualization on graphs, all while reducing bias in genomic analyses.

 

Thanks to Genome Canada for sponsoring the Bioinformatics in Canada Special Session at ISMB 2024!

 

Session Recaps

BioInfo-Core

The bioinfo-core COSI brings together managers and staff working in bioinformatics core facilities around the world. In our first full day session, we had a mix of presentations, panel discussions, and breakout groups.

Talks:

  • Swapnil Sawant from Phoenix Bioinformatics spoke about the comprehensive modernization of TAIR (the arabadopsis information resource, a website and database with 600k users globally). They were starting with legacy technology more than 20 years old, where changes took a long time and maintenance costs were high. By keeping the interface pretty similar and moving to a new technology platform, they were able to improve performance a lot for users and make things easier and cheaper to maintain.

  • Francesco Lescai gave an excellent introduction and overview about nextflow, the problems it helps solve for cores, gave us a feel for what it looks like, and discussed the nf-core community.

  • Nikhil Kumar offered another view of nextflow as they use it at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, where they have shareable nextflow modules within their center, how they set this up and how they use it to good effect.

  • Dena Leshkowitz spoke about UTAP2, a popular and user friendly pipeline allowing non-computational users to easily perform transcriptomic and epigenomic data processing and analysis.

  • Grace Pigeau discussed the massive amount of data being generated at OICR and some of their approaches and strategies to manage and remove or store this data once they have processed and generated the results.

  • In a rather memorable and unusual rhyming talk, George Bell discussed the development of command line linux-style scripts and tools they write to allow their end users to perform different types of downstream analysis in R, etc. Users who might not want to bother learning a whole language are still willing to run a script on the command line.

  • Patricia Carvajal Lopez spoke about the Bioinformatics core facility competency framework, an effort to better define the role of a bioinformatics core facility scientist at three different levels plus a managerial level using competencies and knowledge, skills, and attributes.

  • Michael Laszloffy showed and discussed Dimsum, a dashboard for quality control, project tracking, turnaround time reporting, and more. This allows OICR to better keep track of the status of all their projects and keep on top of their turnaround time and progress, set priorities, and better communicate with end users.

  • Aliye Hashemi presented about protein classification using delaunay tessellation, a way of representing a protein using points in 3D space. That data is then put into a neural network in order to classify proteins.

Panels:

  • AI/LLMs in cores: what are we doing now?

    • Panelists: Dexter Pratt, Nancy Li, Michelle Brazas, Dukka KC

    • This was a really excellent and wide-ranging discussion on everything from training users on how to use AI and LLMs, using generative AI to help develop training materials, incorporating AI chat agents into web interfaces, how to set up the infrastructure so that users can access and query various models on their own without too much hassle, open source vs. commercial models, etc. We all wrote down many notes to take home and explore further.

  • New technologies in cores

    • Panelists: Madelaine Gogol, Lorena Pantano Rubino

    • How do cores manage to find the time and resources to be able to tackle new technologies? How do they avoid the situation that the first person to do some new type of project has to pay for all the development time? Perhaps more questions were raised than answered. One suggestion was that the first pilot project gets a discount on the sequencing and the project then becomes a collaborative project resulting in a publication. There was some discussion at what point you treat a project as a one-off and at what point it starts becoming part of a pipeline.

Breakout groups:
We broke into three breakout groups based on what the people in the room were interested in discussing.

  • Pipelines – nextflow was quite popular, but they discussed how transition to using a workflow tool does require some time and effort. You also must compare and evaluate how this new approach compares to what you have done before.

  • Cost recovery models and management – basically it’s challenging. Some cores use a combination of techniques or approaches. Some charge by the hour, but it’s not really fair to clients who are first to try a new type of project. Different analysts also may take different amounts of time on the same type of project. There is also a fixed cost model for a particular type of project, but there is a risk that you estimate the cost wrong. Some people estimate a minimum number of hours required and if the project goes over, then an additional discussion is needed with the collaborator.

  • Managing big data – What data actually DOES need to be saved, and what data needs to be made FAIR? What data can you upload to repositories for longer term storage? In some groups, every project actually has a data management plan, but the compliance with that plan is not always there. iRODs was mentioned as a solution, but it wasn’t an option for other reasons so they went with a second choice, which was more DIY. Starfish was mentioned as a commercial solution. Some places have a data steward, which is a role helping guide people through what metadata they need, what they should store where (locally or cloud) and for how long, etc.

BioVis

We started the day with a keynote from Melanie Tory (The Roux Institute, Northeastern University). She gave an engaging and insightful talk titled “When Visualization Meets AI: Exploring Opportunities.” After the keynote, Zeynep H. Gümüş (Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai) presented work titled “PRIMAVO: Precision Immune Monitoring Assay Visualization Online,” for which she later received the Best Abstract Award. The first session was then closed by Eric Mörth (Harvard Medical School), who presented a talk on mixed reality titled “The Best of Both Worlds: Blending Mixed Reality and 2D Displays in a Hybrid Approach for Visual Analysis of 3D Tissue Maps.”

After lunch, we had a series of seven abstract talks. The session was opened by Sehi L'Yi (Harvard Medical School), who presented a talk "Understanding Visualization Authoring for Genomics Data through User Interviews." After that, Suzanne Paley (SRI International) introduced New BioCyc Visualization Tools for Genome Exploration and Comparison. Yannis Nevers (Université de Lausanne) discussed "Matreex: Compact and Interactive Visualization of Large Gene Families" and Hiruna Samarakoon (University of New South Wales) showcased the "Interactive Visualization of Raw Nanopore Signal Data with Squigualiser." Towards the end of the session, Devin Lange (University of Utah) gave two presentations: "Aggregate Annotated Single-Cell Heatmap Visualizations" and "Aardvark: Composite Visualizations of Trees, Time-Series, and Images." Finally, Komlan Atitey (National Institutes of Health) wrapped up the session with "Boosting Data Interpretation with GIBOOST to Enhance Visualization of High-Dimensional Data."

In the last session, we enjoyed an online proceedings presentation by Xiaocheng Zeng from Tsinghua University, titled "Unveil Cis-acting Combinatorial mRNA Motifs by Interpreting Deep Neural Network." Last but not least, Fritz Lekschas gave his keynote talk on “The Insight's in the Details: Challenges and Opportunities for BioVis Software Tools”. We then wrapped up the day with a closing ceremony where the Best Abstract Award was presented to Osho Rawal, Edgar Gonzalez-Kozlova, Sacha Gnjatic, and Zeynep H. Gümüş for their work on PRIMAVO.

iRNA

Many iRNA participants had dinner at Restaurant Les Soeurs Grises where in addition to sampling Québécois cuisine, they were also subjected to our traditional iRNA quiz measuring their depth (or lack) of knowledge of Montreal. The second day of iRNA started with a keynote by Chris Burge from MIT who presented the KATMAP algorithm, an approach that uses in vitro binding data and knockdown/RNA-seq to derive splicing activity maps of RNA binding proteins to enable advanced interpretation of RNA splicing. We then had diverse talks, considering diverse organisms, discussing RNA foundational models and their uses, RNA design and the prediction of different RNA features and regulations including translation initiation, protein-RNA-binding, the extent and conservation of translational efficiency covariation, polyadenylation, G4 RNA presence and RNA structure. We finished the day with our fourth keynote talk by Jérôme Waldispühl from McGill University who presented a data-driven structural virtual screening pipeline which uses an augmented classification of RNA base pairs combined with graph machine learning methods to identify promising candidate molecule binding.The bioinfo-core COSI brings together managers and staff working in bioinformatics core facilities around the world. In our first full day session, we had a mix of presentations, panel discussions, and breakout groups.

NetBio

We are excited to share some highlights from today’s NetBio afternoon session at ISMB2024! The session kicked off with an inspiring keynote by Sergio Baranzini on "Towards Semantic Representation and Causal Inference in Biomedicine: Challenges and Applications."

We had one proceeding (doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btae250) and three selected talks covering various network biology methods and applications, including modlling metastatic progression, network inference for neuropsychiatric disorders, single-cell based network inference, and community detection.

Thanks to all the speakers and attendees for the great discussions. We are looking forward to a full day tomorrow, including the first part of our poster session. Stay tuned!

RegSys

Day 1, July 13, 2024:

We launched RegSys 2024 with a Keynote presented by Carl de Boer from The University of British Columbia where he shared his insights on “Continual improvement of cis-regulatory models”, in particular how a DREAM challenge has helped determine the best cis regulatory modeling choices. His team also developed an API to enable continuous benchmarking of models and tasks. One important note was made on how to avoid data leakage caused by sequence similarities across the genomes: sometimes our models are not learning, they are memorizing data. We then had two selected talks by Peter Koo and Melanie Weilert where they presented tools to interpret large scale deep learning models to identify regulatory mechanisms. Peter showed his lab’s work on tools focused on solving this problem, and Melanie showed how these tools can be applied to learn novel biological insights. We closed the morning session with five amazing flash talks representing the high-level poster session put together by the RegSys Program committee.

The second session of the day was opened by a keynote by Jian Ma from Carnegie Mellon University, presenting his lab’s work on how 3D features modulate gene function (structure/function), and how we can use 3D data to analyze single cell Hi-C data and separate sub cell types. We closed this session with two selected and one proceedings talks by Bill Noble, Gabriel Dolsten and Ghulam Murtaza, respectively. They presented methods to analyze bulk and single Hi-C data, showing how low-coverage Hi-C data can be compensated and the application of loop identification to characterize differences between closely related cell types.

Finally, the last session of the day was kicked off with two selected talks by Emily Maciejewski and Mirae Kim, where both presenters showed their work on detection of methylation sites across species (CMImpute) and across tissues (UBERON plus Minipatch), highlighting the relevance of genome annotation and data curation. We closed this session with a Keynote by Michael Hoffman from Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, presenting strategies to predict transcription factor binding from expression, cross species conservation, open chromatin and motif data. This Virtual ChIP-seq work is highly relevant, as it is an impossible task to generate all ChIP-seq data for all tissues and cell types.

 

The Success Circle event this evening was a hit! This unique take on traditional thought-leader sessions, designed to foster meaningful connections and facilitate knowledge sharing among attendees, was an inspiring evening for all involved!  

 

Bioninformatics.ca Celebrates 25 Years!

On Saturday night, Bioinformatics.ca celebrated 25 years of hosting workshops and building up bioinformatics across Canada with a reception allowing members, new and old, to celebrate together at ISMB 2024! Congratulations on 25 great years, Bioinformatics.ca. Cheers to 25 more!

 

Coming Up Tomorrow, Monday, July 15

Abridged Agenda
Detailed Agenda
 
 
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