Single-Cell : Transcriptomics, Spatial and Long reads
DifficultyLevel
Intermediate
OpenTo
Everyone
more
...
Description
This workshop focuses on the large-scale study of heterogeneity across individual cells from a genomic, transcriptomic and epigenomic point of view. New technological developments enable the characterization of molecular information at a single cell resolution for large numbers of cells. The high dimensional omics data that these technologies produce raise novel methodological challenges for the analysis. In this regard, dedicated bioinformatics and statistical methods have been developed in order to extract robust information.

The workshop aims to provide such methods for engineers and researchers directly involved in functional genomics projects making use of single-cell technologies. A wide range of single cell topics will be covered in lectures, demonstrations and practical classes. Among others, the areas and issues to be addressed will include the choice of the most appropriate single-cell sequencing technology, the experimental design and the bioinformatics and statistical methods and pipelines. For this edition, new courses/practicals will focus on spatial transcriptomics, cell phenotyping and additional multi-omics.

A wide range of single cell topics will be covered in lectures, demonstrations and practical classes. Among others, the areas and issues to be addressed will include the choice of the most appropriate single-cell sequencing technology, the experimental design and the bioinformatics and statistical methods and pipelines. For this edition, new courses/practicals will focus on spatial transcriptomics, cell phenotyping and additional multi-omics.

Requirements : Participants must have prior experience on NGS data analysis with everyday use of R and good knowledge of Unix command line. Before the training, participants will be asked to familiarize themselves with the processing and primary analyses steps of scRNA-seq datasets with provided pedagogic material.

It is not necessary to have personal single-cell data to analyse.