Header Leaderboard Ad

Collapse

Dave - interested in trial data sets and high-throughput sequencing tutorials

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse

SEQanswers June Challenge Has Begun!

The competition has begun! We're giving away a $50 Amazon gift card to the member who answers the most questions on our site during the month. We want to encourage our community members to share their knowledge and help each other out by answering questions related to sequencing technologies, genomics, and bioinformatics. The competition is open to all members of the site, and the winner will be announced at the beginning of July. Best of luck!

For a list of the official rules, visit (https://www.seqanswers.com/forum/sit...wledge-and-win)
See more
See less
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Dave - interested in trial data sets and high-throughput sequencing tutorials

    Hi all:

    I'm interested in learning how to analyze NGS data sets from the latest devices but have no access to the actual machines at my workplace. What are the best open sources of raw data to analyze?

    I'd like to get up to speed on the essential NGS software and practice a bit with it. I am fluent in a couple programming languages (R, Perl, Java, C#, Python) but am not a "real" CS programmer (biologist by training).

  • #2
    Anyone who says they are fluent in 5 computer languages should quite saying they are not a "real" programmer!

    The NCBI Short Reads Archive & European Short Reads Archive are good sources for datasets. Many of the programs will run on a typical laptop or desktop, though for really big datasets you will run into challenges.

    Bowtie is a good first program to try.

    There are several reviews floating around on second generation sequencing data analysis; one of the Nature magazines (Biotech? Methods?) had a special section recently. Or, just take one of the recent publications from the Literature Watch section here & read it end-to-end including the methods & try to digest that.

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Dave S. View Post
      Hi all:

      I'm interested in learning how to analyze NGS data sets from the latest devices but have no access to the actual machines at my workplace. What are the best open sources of raw data to analyze?

      I'd like to get up to speed on the essential NGS software and practice a bit with it. I am fluent in a couple programming languages (R, Perl, Java, C#, Python) but am not a "real" CS programmer (biologist by training).
      Bfast comes with a tool to generate synthetic reads (bfast/butil/bgeneratereads).

      The software can introduce indels, SNPs, errors, etc...

      bwa and maq have something similar too.

      Figure out what is the current throughput from the different sequencers and generate data to "play" with it.

      If you need to get closer to the sequencer, that is going to be more complicate. Start by downloading the manuals from your sequencer of choice and get the big picture of how the data flow happens.
      -drd

      Comment


      • #4
        I am interested in this as well but I do not find most reviews and papers I have read helpful as for learning. Does anyone know any tutorial that really explains the procedures in detail?

        Comment


        • #5
          Thanks

          Thanks for the info drio and krobinson.

          Perhaps I'll see if the DNALinux people are interested in adding some of the NGS tools to the VM image and if so, I could build some of them in.

          Ha, thanks for the "real programmer" comment. I tend to think of people who can write a video card driver in assembly as "real" programmers, but I guess that is the minority of even CS grads.

          Comment

          Latest Articles

          Collapse

          ad_right_rmr

          Collapse

          News

          Collapse

          Topics Statistics Last Post
          Started by seqadmin, 06-01-2023, 08:56 PM
          0 responses
          8 views
          0 likes
          Last Post seqadmin  
          Started by seqadmin, 06-01-2023, 07:33 AM
          0 responses
          8 views
          0 likes
          Last Post seqadmin  
          Started by seqadmin, 05-31-2023, 07:50 AM
          0 responses
          4 views
          0 likes
          Last Post seqadmin  
          Started by seqadmin, 05-26-2023, 09:22 AM
          0 responses
          10 views
          0 likes
          Last Post seqadmin  
          Working...
          X