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  • gstarrett
    replied
    Hello all,

    I'm a recent graduate and a new research technician working at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Our lab does lots of pyrosequencing using our GS Junior to genotype non-human primate MHC genes. Additionally we're moving into whole genome analysis, which will become a big part of my job, using Illumina data. My background is primarily in bacteriology, but have always had an interest in bioinformatics and have been gradually learning the ropes. This website is a great resource and I'm sure this will not be my last post.

    Thanks,
    Gabriel

    Leave a comment:


  • sophied
    replied
    Hi all,

    I am a graduate who has this year made the move out of the lab and into an office cubicle to work in bioinformatics. I have dabbled in bovine rumen metagenomics (using 454 and illumina) and now have a job assembling fungal endophyte genomes (using illumina HiSeq2000). I am really enjoying my foray into bioinformatics and this forum has been such a great resource. Thanks for creating such a supportive and vibrant online community!

    Cheers,
    Sophie

    Leave a comment:


  • Neuromancer
    replied
    Hey community!

    I'm a PhD student in Germany and am now starting to try NGS analysis as our University just installed its first Illiumina HiSeq2000 and had its first run recently. I'm not a Bioinformation by training but hope to get helpful insight in this community.
    So far, I played with bowtie, Seqmonk and FastQC, which is imho a good introduction to NGS data analysis because they are rather easy to handle.

    In particular, I'm working on histone modifications and the corresponding enzymes in neuronal tissue in health an disease. So I'll deal with ChIP-seq and RNA-seq at present and in the near future.

    Thanks in advance for answering beginners questions!

    Leave a comment:


  • equus
    replied
    Hello

    I am a postdoc balancing the pros and cons between Illumina and 454 RNA-seq methods. I am so glad SEQanswers exists to support questions, and will probably be asking some questions soon

    Leave a comment:


  • Cansado
    replied
    Hi

    Hi:

    Looking for help with deep sequence analysis on the Macintosh and found some helpful pointers here already. Thanks and hopefully I will be able to contribute some help as well.

    Cheers

    Leave a comment:


  • Kieran Mace
    replied
    Hi there!!!

    I'd just like to say to the forum. I'm really excited to start absorbing from the collective source of knowledge!!!

    -Kieran

    Leave a comment:


  • Turnerac0987
    replied
    Hello everyone!

    My name is Angela and I just started working as a Molecular Biologist at the National Institutes of Health. My lab is trying to use next generation sequencing technologies (Illumina GAIIx and maybe Ion Torrent in the future) for a genetic research study of eye genes. While I already have some experience with library preparation and sequencing, I'm realizing that I'm only scratching the surface.

    I'm sure I'll have tons of questions and I hope to be able to help others with the knowledge I gain in the future.

    ~Angela

    Leave a comment:


  • aforntacc
    replied
    Hi every body my name is charles, this is my very first time and i am learning how to map shot reads of RNASEQ from Illunima. i hope to get help from you good guys. cheers

    Leave a comment:


  • Kacper
    replied
    Hi,
    My name is Kacper. I'm work in Poland at National Research Institute of Animal Production and have just started working with the HiSeq from Illumina.
    Regards,
    Kacper

    Leave a comment:


  • jsorenson
    replied
    Hello from an long-time NGS fan

    I've been working on software and the analysis of NGS sequencing data since before the first 454 sequencer came out, but I'm sorry to say I'd never registered at SEQanswers before!

    Thanks Eric for running such a great site for the community, and I'm happy to help contribute to the forums.

    Jon Sorenson

    (ex software lead AB SOLiD, ex bioinformatics lead PacBio RS, current genome analyst @ Locus Development)

    Leave a comment:


  • Mdpboyle
    replied
    NextGen for undergrads

    Hi All.
    I am an undergraduate educator and part of a new network that is trying to include NextGen sequencing into undergraduate research and the core curriculum. Organizing this network has been supported by a grant from NSF (NSF Award # DBI-1061893 ) . The network has recently become part of the Genome Consortium for Active Teaching (GCAT) and are known as GCAT-SEEK ( http://lycofs01.lycoming.edu/~newman/gcat-seek/ ).

    We are looking for sequencing organizations who might be interested in partnering with groups of undergraduate colleges throughout the U.S. to facilitate getting raw NextGen sequence to support undergraduate research and education. The goal is to include novel next-generation DNA sequence analysis in ongoing undergraduate research, so that these research activities can be incorporated into core courses within the undergraduate life sciences curriculum. While there is plenty of unanalyzed sequences available in multiple databases, there is also an abundance of evidence if the education literature (e.g. http://jmbe.asm.org/index.php/jmbe/a...view/133/pdf_9) that if the teacher and the students do not share a sense of ownership in the data and the research question then laboratory and classroom exercises based on that data move from being exciting opened-inquiry to busy work. Our goal is to excite the next generation of researchers (currently undergraduates) using NextGen sequencing and all of its ”cool” applications.

    If any sequence facility is interested in this type of outreach, please let me know.
    Mike Boyle

    Leave a comment:


  • anshumanbt
    replied
    Introduction

    Hello everyone I am a research fellow and new to this field. My current project needs knowledge about ChIP and RIP analysis. Apart from that can anyone give a perfect explanation on Cistrome and a protocol for carrying out these ChIP and RIP assays. Any suggestions would be a great help for me. Thank you

    Leave a comment:


  • msheldon
    replied
    hi

    Hi, I am from southern California and do work on genomic and messenger RNA. Nice to see a forum where I can ask questions.

    Leave a comment:


  • marcel777
    replied
    Hi all,
    I'm a PhD student working on predicting and modeling alternative splicing, identifying DEGs and differentially alternatively spliced genes.

    Leave a comment:


  • SpiralGenetics
    replied
    Hello from Spiral Genetics

    Hello,

    I'm a co-founder of a young start up called Spiral Genetics. We just launched the first version of our DNA analysis platform a few days ago and we are looking for feedback from the research community. Spiral's platform offers significant speed advantages allowing researchers to analyze whole genome datasets in 5 hours or less. We currently support alignment to reference with BWA and Bowtie, as well as SNP detection and annotation. Any comments or feedback that you have would be very helpful!

    The first version of our software has a command line interface and the web-base user interface is on its way. My goal is to have an active dialogue with the seqanswers community so I can build a platform that solves some of the most computationally intensive data analysis problems in next-gen sequencing.

    Thanks!
    Adina Mangubat

    Leave a comment:

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    Next-generation sequencing (NGS) and quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) are essential techniques for investigating the genome, transcriptome, and epigenome. In many cases, choosing the appropriate technique is straightforward, but in others, it can be more challenging to determine the most effective option. A simple distinction is that smaller, more focused projects are typically better suited for qPCR, while larger, more complex datasets benefit from NGS. However,...
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