Seminars
Wednesday 4th November, 3-4pm in Mac 1 (Old Biology Building)
Kay Nieselt - University of Tuebingen
Title: "Characterisation of non-coding RNAs and RNA-RNA interactions in Streptomyces coelicolor"
Abstract:Several studies of non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) have shown that they are involved in a wide spectrum of different processes and almost daily the list of processes is enlarged. Nevertheless, the functions of most ncRNA transcripts are still unknown. There is by now a number of tools published for the genomewide prediction of ncRNA regions. However, most such programs produce an unknown number of false positives. Furthermore, the locus prediction does not provide information about functional ncRNAs that might be contained in the corresponnding region. We present an approach to annotate ncRNAs predicted by programs such as RNAz (Washietl et al., 2005). Loci containing predicted ncRNAs are compared to known ncRNA families. In addition, we compute features related to the transcription process which allows us to distingush putative ncRNA transcripts from ncRNA regulatory motifs. In addition, we can predict interactions between putative ncRNA transcripts and mRNAs. These methods are applied to the antibiotic-producing soil bacterium Streptomyces coelicolor. Almost 4000 ncRNA elements were predicted, most of them overlapping with protein coding genes. First results show that several key proteins in S. coelicolor are regulated by ncRNA transcripts. This is supported by genomewide high resolution time series expression data using a custom-designed microarray targeting all protein coding genes as well as our predicted ncRNAs.
Wednesday 18th November
Steffen Klaere - Department of Mathematics
Title: “MISFITS: assigning extra mutations to a phylogenetic treeâ€
Tuesday 8th December
Dr Naryttza DÃaz - Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics
Dr Naryttza DÃaz - Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics
Title: "Taxonomic classification of environmental genomic fragments: From whole genomes to genomic fragments"
Abstract:Understanding the species composition of natural microbial communities is a milestone to gain access to the beneficial aspects of these microbial collectives. The dropping sequencing costs allow to sequence entire microbial communities without previous culturing. Metagenomics is the sequencing and analysis of collective genomes (metagenomes) of microorganisms isolated from an environment. The metagenomics approach promises to be a gateway to access the estimated 99% of species that still resist cultivation. However, due to the complexity and amount of data generated in metagenomic projects the prediction of the taxonomic origin of the genomic fragments composing a metagenomic sample is still a challenging issue in computational biology. In this talk, a novel strategy for the taxonomic classification of metagenomic sequence data will be presented.
Wednesday 9th December
Greg Gamble - Department of Medicine
Title: “Workflows I have metâ€
Scott Family trust PhD Scholarship
26th August 2009
Title: Mapping ocean biogeography for ecosystem assessments, MPA network planning, and predicting climate change effect.
Full description of the scholarship can be download here
News
4th August 2009
Bioinformatics Summer Studentships - Closed!
The Bioinformatics Institute is once again offering summer studentships to undergraduate students who are enrolled in a BSc (Bioinformatics) and BSc (Hons). The scholarships provide funding over the summer break and a chance to experience real applications of Bioinformatics data. Students are invited to submit an academic CV (non-official) and to nominate the project they would be interested in undertaking (email Emma Marks at e.marks@auckland.ac.nz). Applications close on the 4th of Sept at 5pm. Notification of acceptance will be made via email in late September.
List of summer pojects can be download here Summer Studentship Projects 2009
4th August 2009
Here are some recent publications from members of the Bioinformatics Institute!
- Abbott, W. G. H.,Tsai, P.,Leung, E., Trevarton, A., ‘Ofanoa, M., Hornell, J., Gane, E. J., Munn, S.R., andRodrigo, A. G.(In press) Associations between HLA Class I Alleles and Escape Mutations in the Hepatitis B Virus Core Gene in New Zealand-Resident Tongans. Journal of Virology
- Rambaut, A; Ho, SYW;Drummond, AJ.Accommodating the Effect of Ancient DNA Damage on Inferences of Demographic Histories. MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 26 (2): 245-248 FEB 2009. Full text
- Atkinson, QD; Gray, RD;Drummond, AJ.Bayesian coalescent inference of major human mitochondrial DNA haplogroup expansions in Africa. PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 276 (1655): 367-373 JAN 22 2009. Full text
- Gray, RD;Drummond, AJ;Greenhill, SJ. Language Phylogenies Reveal Expansion Pulses and Pauses in Pacific Settlement. SCIENCE, 323 (5913): 479-483 JAN 23 2009. Full text
-Marks E. J., Rodrigo A. G.& Brunton D. H (In press). Ecstatic Display Calls of the Adélie penguin honestly predict male condition and breeding success. Behaviour.
-Wu, S.H.,Black, M.A., North, R. A., Atkinson, K.,R. andRodrigo, A. G.(In press). A statistical model to identify differentially expressed proteins in 2D PAGE gels. PLoS Comp. Biol.
- Marion Blumenstein1, Michael T. McMaster, Michael A. Black,Steven Wu,Roneel Prakash, Janine Cooney, Lesley M. E. McCowan, Garth J. S. Cooper and Robyn A. North. A proteomic approach identifies early pregnancy biomarkers for preeclampsia: Novel linkages between a predisposition to preeclampsia and cardiovascular disease. Proteomic
-Hayward, J. H.andRodrigo, A. G.(In press). Molecular epidemiology of feline immunodeficiency virus in the domestic cat (Felis catus). Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology
-Rodrigo, A. G.(2009) The coalescent. In The Phylogenetics Handbook 2nd Edition (eds. Salemi, M., Vandamme A.M, and Lemey, P). Cambridge University Press.
-Langhoff, P.,Authier, A., Buckley, T. R., Dugdale, J. S.,Rodrigo, A., and Newcomb, R.D. (In press). DNA barcoding of the endemic New Zealand leafroller moth genera, Ctenopseustis and Planotortrix. Molecular Ecology Notes. Full text
-Rodrigo, A. G., Tsai, P.,andShearman, H.2009. On the Use of Bootstrapped Topologies in Coalescent-Based Bayesian McMc Inference: A Comparison of Estimation and Computational Efficiencies. Evolutionary Bioinformatics 5:97-105. Full text
- Gillman, L. N., D. J. Keeling,H. A. Ross,and S. D. Wright. (In press). Latitude, elevation and the tempo of molecular evolution in mammals. Proceedings of the Royal Society B-Biological Sciences.
- Wright, S. D., L. N. Gillman,H. A. Ross,and D. J. Keeling. (In press). Slower tempo of microevolution in island birds: implications for conservation biology. Evolution.
- Anderson, M. G.,H. A. Ross,D. H. Brunton, and M. E. Hauber. (In press). Begging call matching between a specialist brood parasite and its host: A comparative approach to detect co-evolution. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society.
| Featured Research | |
![]() | Katie Marske The goal of my PhD research is to reconstruct the glacial landscape of the South Island of New Zealand during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) using a combination of insect population genetics, ecological niche modeling, and comparative phylogeography. The LGM had a massive impact on the landscapes of the South Island, but the ecological conditions facing the temperate flora and fauna, particularly forest species, are still poorly understood. We aim to identify the locations of putative South Island forest refugia using population genetics (mitochondrial CO1) for five widespread, endemic mycophagous beetle species. Refugial hypotheses will be tested by creating ecological niche models for each species based on their modern geographic distribution and available LGM climate projections. Results will be compared across species to identify any shared refugia. |
