Introduction to Pathogen Genomics for Public Health Webinar Series
Webinar: Bioinformatic analysis of pathogens for clinical and public health
Part one: Tuesday 18 July 2023 13:00 - 16:00 (AEST)
Part two: Thursday 20 July 2023 13:00 - 15:30 (AEST)
Overview
Are you a clinical scientist, medical microbiologist or infectious diseases physician wanting to gain an understanding of the application of bioinformatics for pathogen genomics in public health?
Following on from the wet-lab webinar held in May, this is the second of a four-part webinar series co-hosted by the Communicable Diseases Genomics Network (CDGN) and the Australian Pathogen Genomics Program.
Learning outcomes
Key learning outcomes of the second webinar in the Introduction to Pathogen Genomics for Public Health Webinar Series include:
To provide introductory understanding of bioinformatics processes for pathogen genomics
To understand the implication of data quality for downstream analyses
To understand limitations associated with different bioinformatics processes
Webinar facilitators
Dr Lex Leong, Pathogen Genomics Lead, South Australia Pathology
Dr Joep de Ligt, Senior Science Lead Bioinformatics & Genomics, Institute of Environmental Science and Research
Dr Kristy Horan, Bioinformatics Section Leader, Microbiological Diagnostic Unit Public Health Laboratory
Dr Jenny Draper, Bioinformatician, Institute of Clinical Pathology and Medical Research
Dr Stanley Pang, Senior Bioinformatician, PathWest
Dr Mitchell Sullivan, Bioinformatics Analyst, Forensic and Scientific Services, Queensland Health
Dr John-Sebastian Eden, Senior Research Fellow, University of Sydney and Westmead Institute for Medical Research
Mr Jacob May, Medical Scientist, South Australia Pathology
Dr Jake Lacey, Bioinformatics Section Support, Microbiological Diagnostic Unit Public Health Laboratory
Registration
Please register via this link.
Program
Part one: Tuesday 18 July 2023 13:00 - 16:00 (AEST)
Assessment of sequence quality and filtering - Dr Lex Leong
Recognise the differences between raw sequence outputs
Understand the differences between long and short read sequence data
Be able to explain the QC metrics required to pass a run/sample.
Understand the trimming process (when or if trimming required)
Methods of whole genome sequencing assembly - Dr Stanley Pang
Understand the differences between assembly methods
Recognise the differences between tools used in de novo assembly, mapping and hybrid
Species identification and subtyping - Dr Kristy Horan
Understand the differences between kmer, alignment, and profile-based identification
Understand the concepts of MLST, cgMLST, and SNP distances, and their different levels of resolution
Awareness that genomic and traditional serotyping/laboratory methods may be discordant
Whole genome sequencing approach for antimicrobial resistance - Dr Jenny Draper
Understanding different methods & tools
Comparing both gene detection vs mutational resistance detection
Database & nomenclature challenges
Be mindful of the challenges present in in-silico AMR determination
Viral pathogens - Dr John-Sebastian Eden
Challenges/issues/considerations specific to viral pathogens and viral evolutions
Quasi species
Genetic differences of viral pathogens
Part two: Thursday 20 July 2023 13:00 - 15:30 (AEST)
Bioinformatic considerations for challenging organisms - Mr Jacob May
Considerations of fungal WGS
Correct identification of fungal species
Consideration of different growth stages
AMR and diploidy
Comparison of tools
Introduction to phylogenetics and cluster analysis - Dr Jake Lacey
Recognise the common phylogenetic models used and other variables
Understand that different organisms have different cluster thresholds
Visualising techniques for cluster analysis - Dr Mitchell Sullivan
Visualisation techniques
Different cluster techniques, including phylogenetic branching, SNP distance (hierarchy clustering/pop punk), split KMER analysis, SNP profiles, cgMLST/MLST-like schemes, and defining SNP thresholds
Data reproducibility and version control of bioinformatic tools - Dr Joep de Ligt
Understanding challenges of classification of bacteria using WGS
Defining acceptance/rejection criteria for organism identification
Understanding taxonomic classification and continuous monitoring for updates to international standards
Validation, including when it has to be in-silico (no wetlab data to use)
AMR detection