Imprresive demonstration about bioinformatics analysis.
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8.8 years ago
cfarmeri ▴ 210

Hi. This is a casual question.
I'll have presentation about bioinformatics analysis against people not familiar this academic filed.

In the presentation, I'll demonstrate some kind of bioinformatics analysis in command line in about five minutes. Any idea what analysis is most impressive?
For example, from Bowtie2 mapping to IGV view, SNP detection.

could you please suggest me anything and everything!!

demonstration presentation • 3.1k views
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I would download the Human Genome and unzip as HUMAN_GENOME.fasta (ftp://ftp-trace.ncbi.nih.gov/1000genomes/ftp/technical/reference/human_g1k_v37.fasta.gz)

Run grep 'GATTACA' --color HUMAN_GENOME.fa for a few seconds while they look at the pretty colours and the sheer amount of data being processed.

Run grep -o 'A' HUMAN_GENOME.fa | wc -l. Explain how little blocks can be put together into pipelines that make prototyping easier.

While that's running (takes about 5-7 min and should eventually print 845,903,867), open up a python interpreter and run print open('HUMAN_GENOME.fa','rb').read().count('T')

This should take just under a minute (much faster than the grep), and explain that while building blocks are fun, a basic knowledge of programming can result in much faster programs/etc.

Personally I find things like mapping/etc are way too over the top for most biologists, since these are really abstract concepts to them. Plots are great - but only if they know what they're looking at. I've sat in far too many bioinformatics presentations (particularly at Uni) when the presenter wanted to impress us with things he/she found interesting, but it didn't spark anyone else's imagination. Great, we've aligned some DNA. So what?

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Is the purpose of this to train them or impress them?

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The purpose of this is suggesting to them how useful the analysis is in medicine or biology. I'm sorry ambiguous.

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I would show an R session, e.g., from raw expression data counts to nice graphs and figures such as heatmaps or PCA. Or even to pathways or networks.

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I second this. Not being biased but biologists in general are very drawn to colorful representation of data (like heatmaps). Having said that, it must be easy to digest in one go or else the interest might be lost.

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Thanks b.nota and Amitm.

Colorful representation of figure (heatmaps or PCA) is good idea!
I'll find a befitting data for creating some vivid figure.

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I'd recommend using the data and instructions from Count-based differential expression analysis of RNA sequencing data using R and Bioconductor. That way, you can even give them the link if they want to reproduce it.

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What about something related to the Ebola or the Zika outbreaks? e.g. this analysis

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8.8 years ago

I wrote a simple demo to generate a NGS workflow with make. Describe the model of data using XML, generate a Makefile-workflow with XSLT, and run in parallel with Make. May be complicated (no fancy image), but it gives a good overview of the job.

Other idea, query pubmed using command line: e.g: ""put in a database the 10 first ordered sequences from the 100 last records about rotavirus at NCBI, but not containing the word VP7 "" Justifying Learning Linux For Bioinformatics

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Thank you a lot!!
I'm not familiar with XSLT so I try it after studying!

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8.8 years ago

The purpose of this is suggesting to them how useful the analysis is in medicine or biology.

In this case I would go for browsing a genome viewer like IGV to show mutation(s) responsible for a phenotype (e.g. a disease) or some differentially expressed genes under some condition of interest. I think it would give visually a sense of what can be done and how the data looks like. I don't think showing bits of code would convey much unless you want to show how you get from raw data to final results.

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Presenting some mutations by the side of phenotype is so good!

The presentation will be held at the medical department. So thanks!

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8.8 years ago
James Ashmore ★ 3.5k

Have a look at the Mission Impossible example by Istvan Albert. A fun example of what you can do with bioinformatics in less than a minute.

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