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	<title><![CDATA[BOL: Related items]]></title>
	<link>https://bioinformaticsonline.com/related/27099?offset=230</link>
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	<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
	
	
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  <guid isPermaLink='true'>https://bioinformaticsonline.com/opportunity/view/13338/protein-function-annotation-and-machine-learning-upmc-paris-france</guid>
  <pubDate>Sat, 02 Aug 2014 01:22:52 -0500</pubDate>
  <link></link>
  <title><![CDATA[Protein function annotation and machine learning - UPMC - Paris, France]]></title>
  <description><![CDATA[
<p>Protein function annotation and machine learning - UPMC - Paris, France</p>

<p>Job Description: We are interested in finding an excellent postdoc with interests in protein functional annotation, machine learning and computer grids. The position is open for 3.5 years at the Université Pierre et Marie Curie, in the heart of paris.</p>

<p>Research topic: Protein function annotation, multiple probabilistic models, domain architecture, machine learning, combinatorial optimization, computer grid.</p>

<p>Title: A novel integrative platform for large scale protein annotation that exploits a multitude of diversified probabilistic models in several protein signature databases.</p>

<p>We propose a novel integrated approach for large scale protein annotation that will exploit an unprecedented amount of genomic data as well as sophisticated machine learning techniques and combinatorial optimization approaches taking advantages of High Performance Computing (HPC) environments. The idea is to uncover as much as possible the evolutionary processes of protein sequences that took place throughout the whole tree of life and that affected the evolution of a protein family. We have already demonstrated in a previous work that the problem of functional annotation is inherent to the ability of uncovering such paths. Now, we shall extend this approach to large scale genome annotation by considering 11 different protein databases, constituted by about 10^9 protein sequences, and by producing a large pool of diversified probabilistic models coding for about 10^7 evolutionary protein pathways. Such models will be used to search for specific domains in genomes to be annotated. Our previous methodology needs to be fundamentally improved to deal with this large amount of biological data. In this project, we shall work on the algorithms to reduce the space of models and the search complexity, and we shall implement some important algorithmic changes towards the realization of a powerful integrated annotation tool.</p>

<p>Where: This project is run on the Laboratoire de Biologie Computationnelle et Quantitative UMR7238 CNRS-UPMC – Analytical Genomics team, headed by A.Carbone. It is co-advised with Pierre-Henri Wuillemin, Laboratoire d’Informatique de Paris 6 – Equipe DECISION.</p>

<p>Start date: September 1st, 2014<br />Contact Person: Alessandra Carbone<br />Contact: alessandra.carbone@lip6.fr</p>
]]></description>
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<item>
	<guid isPermaLink="true">https://bioinformaticsonline.com/bookmarks/view/26363/flo</guid>
	<pubDate>Wed, 10 Feb 2016 10:52:32 -0600</pubDate>
	<link>https://bioinformaticsonline.com/bookmarks/view/26363/flo</link>
	<title><![CDATA[flo]]></title>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>flo - same species annotations lift over pipeline</p>
<p>Lift over is the process of transferring annotations from one genome assembly to another. Usually lift over is done because there is a new, improved genome assembly for the species and good quality annotations (maybe manually curated or experimentally verified) are available on the old assembly.</p>
<p>The idea is simple: align the new assembly with the old one (e.g., with BLAT), process the alignment data to define how a coordinate or coordinate range on the old assembly should be transformed to the new assembly (e.g., as a chain file), transform the coordinates (e.g., with liftOver).</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>https://github.com/wurmlab/flo</p><p>Address of the bookmark: <a href="https://github.com/wurmlab/flo" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/wurmlab/flo</a></p>]]></description>
	<dc:creator>Jitendra Narayan</dc:creator>
</item>
<item>
	<guid isPermaLink="true">https://bioinformaticsonline.com/bookmarks/view/32485/bacterial-genome-assembly</guid>
	<pubDate>Fri, 05 May 2017 06:11:22 -0500</pubDate>
	<link>https://bioinformaticsonline.com/bookmarks/view/32485/bacterial-genome-assembly</link>
	<title><![CDATA[Bacterial genome assembly !!]]></title>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>This tutorial will serve as an example of how to use free and open-source genome assembly and secondary scaffolding tools to generate high quality assemblies of&nbsp;bacterial sequence data. The bacterial sample used in this tutorial will be referred&nbsp;to simply&nbsp;as &ldquo;Species&rdquo; since it is&nbsp;live data. This data is paired-end data, meaning that there are forward and reverse reads, which we will designate as Sample_R1.fastq and Sample_R2.fastq, respectively.</p>
<p>https://github.com/jennomics/WorkflowPaper/blob/master/Genome%20Assembly%20and%20Annotation.md</p><p>Address of the bookmark: <a href="http://bioinformatics.uconn.edu/bacterial-genome-assembly-tutorial/" rel="nofollow">http://bioinformatics.uconn.edu/bacterial-genome-assembly-tutorial/</a></p>]]></description>
	<dc:creator>Jit</dc:creator>
</item>
<item>
	<guid isPermaLink="true">https://bioinformaticsonline.com/bookmarks/view/31018/j-circos</guid>
	<pubDate>Fri, 17 Feb 2017 09:06:54 -0600</pubDate>
	<link>https://bioinformaticsonline.com/bookmarks/view/31018/j-circos</link>
	<title><![CDATA[J-Circos]]></title>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Circos plot tool (J-Circos) that is an interactive visualization tool that can plot Circos figures, as well as being able to dynamically add data to the figure, and providing information for specific data points using mouse hover display and zoom in/out functions. J-Circos uses the Java computer language to enable it to be used on most operating systems (Windows, MacOS, Linux). Users can input data into J-Circos using flat data formats, as well as from the GUI. J-Circos will enable biologists to better study more complex chromosomal interactions and fusion transcripts that are otherwise difficult to visualize from next-generation sequencing data.</p><p>Address of the bookmark: <a href="http://www.australianprostatecentre.org/research/software/jcircos" rel="nofollow">http://www.australianprostatecentre.org/research/software/jcircos</a></p>]]></description>
	<dc:creator>Shruti Paniwala</dc:creator>
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	<guid isPermaLink="true">https://bioinformaticsonline.com/bookmarks/view/34328/dfast-a-flexible-prokaryotic-genome-annotation-pipeline-for-faster-genome-publication</guid>
	<pubDate>Tue, 14 Nov 2017 10:26:16 -0600</pubDate>
	<link>https://bioinformaticsonline.com/bookmarks/view/34328/dfast-a-flexible-prokaryotic-genome-annotation-pipeline-for-faster-genome-publication</link>
	<title><![CDATA[DFAST: a flexible prokaryotic genome annotation pipeline for faster genome publication]]></title>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>We developed a prokaryotic genome annotation pipeline, DFAST, that also supports genome submission to public sequence databases. DFAST was originally started as an on-line annotation server, and to date, over 7,000 jobs have been processed since its first launch in 2016. Here, we present a newly implemented background annotation engine for DFAST, which is also available as a standalone command-line program. The new engine can annotate a typical-sized bacterial genome within 10 minutes, with rich information such as pseudogenes, translation exceptions, and orthologous gene assignment between given reference genomes. In addition, the modular framework of DFAST allows users to customize the annotation workflow easily and will also facilitate extensions for new functions and incorporation of new tools in the future.</p>
<div>Availability and Implementation</div>
<p>The software is implemented in Python 3 and runs in both Python 2.7 and 3.4&ndash; on Macintosh and Linux systems. It is freely available at&nbsp;<a href="https://github.com/nigyta/dfast_core/" target="">https://github.com/nigyta/dfast_core/</a>&nbsp;under the GPLv3 license with external binaries bundled in the software distribution. An on-line version is also available at&nbsp;<a href="https://dfast.nig.ac.jp/" target="">https://dfast.nig.ac.jp/</a>.</p><p>Address of the bookmark: <a href="https://dfast.nig.ac.jp/" rel="nofollow">https://dfast.nig.ac.jp/</a></p>]]></description>
	<dc:creator>Jit</dc:creator>
</item>
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	<guid isPermaLink="true">https://bioinformaticsonline.com/bookmarks/view/43062/jcvi-utility-libraries</guid>
	<pubDate>Sat, 08 May 2021 22:04:02 -0500</pubDate>
	<link>https://bioinformaticsonline.com/bookmarks/view/43062/jcvi-utility-libraries</link>
	<title><![CDATA[JCVI utility libraries]]></title>
	<description><![CDATA[<p><span>Collection of Python libraries to parse bioinformatics files, or perform computation related to assembly, annotation, and comparative genomics.</span></p><p>Address of the bookmark: <a href="https://github.com/tanghaibao/jcvi" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/tanghaibao/jcvi</a></p>]]></description>
	<dc:creator>Jit</dc:creator>
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	<guid isPermaLink="true">https://bioinformaticsonline.com/blog/view/31566/software-and-tools-to-detect-structure-variation-with-long-reads</guid>
	<pubDate>Wed, 15 Mar 2017 14:31:09 -0500</pubDate>
	<link>https://bioinformaticsonline.com/blog/view/31566/software-and-tools-to-detect-structure-variation-with-long-reads</link>
	<title><![CDATA[Software and Tools to detect structure variation with long reads !!]]></title>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>Uncovering the connection between genetics and heritable diseases requires an approach that looks at all the variant bases and types in a genome. While a PacBio&nbsp;<em>de novo</em>&nbsp;assembly resolves the most novel SV variants. 8-10X PacBio coverage of single genomes or trios reveals triple the SVs detectable by short-read data.</p><p>With&nbsp;<span style="text-decoration: underline;"><a href="http://www.pacb.com/smrt-science/">Single Molecule, Real-Time (SMRT) Sequencing</a></span>, you can access structural variations having a broad range of sizes, types, and GC content with the ability to:</p><ul>
<li>Uncover missing heritability linked to structural variation</li>
<li>Unambiguously identify genomic context and variant breakpoints at the sequence level to unravel the genetic etiology of disease</li>
<li>Resolve structural variation across the complete size spectrum with basepair resolution</li>
</ul><p>Following are the SV tools, which can assist you to achieve your goal.</p><p><strong>Sniffles:</strong>&nbsp;Structural variation caller using third generation sequencing</p><p>Sniffles is a structural variation caller using third generation sequencing (PacBio or Oxford Nanopore). It detects all types of SVs using evidence from split-read alignments, high-mismatch regions, and coverage analysis. Please note the current version of Sniffles requires sorted output from BWA-MEM (use -M and -x parameter) or NGM-LR with the optional SAM attributes enabled!&nbsp;</p><p>More at&nbsp;https://github.com/fritzsedlazeck/Sniffles</p><p><strong style="font-size: 12.8px;"><br />MultiBreak-SV:</strong> It identifies structural variants from next-generation paired end data, third-generation long read data, or data from a combination of sequencing platforms.</p><p>There are two pieces of software in this release: (1) a pre-processor that takes machineformat (.m5) BLASR files, and (2) MultiBreak-SV. For installation and usage instructions, see doc/MultiBreakSV-Manual.txt.</p><p>More at&nbsp;https://github.com/raphael-group/multibreak-sv</p><p><strong style="font-size: 12.8px;"><br />Parliament:</strong>&nbsp;A Structural Variation Tool. Why ask a single sv-detection approach to find every variant when you can have a parliament of tools deciding?</p><p>Publication about the algorithm and &ldquo;&hellip;the first long-read characterization of structural variation in a diploid human personal genome&hellip;&rdquo; (HS1011) -&nbsp;<a href="http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2164/16/286">&ldquo;Assessing structural variation in a personal genome&mdash;towards a human reference diploid genome&rdquo;</a></p><p>More at&nbsp;https://sourceforge.net/projects/parliamentsv/</p><p>https://www.dnanexus.com/papers/Parliament_Info_Sheet.pdf</p><p><br /><strong>PBHoney:</strong>&nbsp;the structural variation discovery tool&nbsp;<br /><br />PBHoney is an implementation of two variant-identification approaches designed to exploit the high mappability of long reads (i.e., greater than 10,000 bp). PBHoney considers both intra-read discordance and soft-clipped tails of long reads to identify structural variants.</p><p>Read The Paper&nbsp;<a href="http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/15/180/abstract" target="_blank">http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/15/180/abstract</a></p><p>More at&nbsp;https://sourceforge.net/projects/pb-jelly/</p><p><strong><br />SMRT-SV:</strong> Structural variant and indel caller for PacBio reads</p><p>Structural variant (SV) and indel caller for PacBio reads based on methods from&nbsp;<a href="http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature13907.html">Chaisson et al. 2014</a>.</p><p>SMRT-SV provides an official software package for tools described in&nbsp;<a href="http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature13907.html">Chaisson et al. 2014</a>&nbsp;and adds several key features including the following.</p><ul>
<li>Unified variant calling user interface with built-in cluster compute support</li>
<li>Small indel calling (2-49 bp)</li>
<li>Improved inversion calling (<code>screenInversions</code>)</li>
<li>Quality metric for SV calls based on number of local assemblies supporting each call</li>
<li>Higher sensitivity for SV calls using tiled local assemblies across the entire genome instead of "signature" regions</li>
<li>Genotyping of SVs with Illumina paired-end reads from WGS samples</li>
</ul><p>More at&nbsp;https://github.com/EichlerLab/pacbio_variant_caller</p>]]></description>
	<dc:creator>Archana Malhotra</dc:creator>
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	<guid isPermaLink="true">https://bioinformaticsonline.com/bookmarks/view/32011/fools-guide</guid>
	<pubDate>Sun, 02 Apr 2017 14:31:18 -0500</pubDate>
	<link>https://bioinformaticsonline.com/bookmarks/view/32011/fools-guide</link>
	<title><![CDATA[Fools guide]]></title>
	<description><![CDATA[<p><span>This website and accompaning documents are intended as a tool to help researchers dealing with non-model organisms acquire and process transcriptomic high-throughput sequencing data without having to learn extensive bioinformatics skills. It covers all steps from tissue collection, sample preparation and computer setup, through addressing biological questions with gene expression and SNP data.</span></p>
<p>http://sfg.stanford.edu/denovo.html</p>
<p>http://sfg.stanford.edu/sequencing.html</p>
<p>http://sfg.stanford.edu/BLAST.html</p>
<p>http://sfg.stanford.edu/denovo.html&nbsp;</p><p>Address of the bookmark: <a href="http://sfg.stanford.edu/guide.html" rel="nofollow">http://sfg.stanford.edu/guide.html</a></p>]]></description>
	<dc:creator>Poonam Mahapatra</dc:creator>
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<item>
  <guid isPermaLink='true'>https://bioinformaticsonline.com/opportunity/view/843/structural-polymorphism-analysis-from-ngs-data</guid>
  <pubDate>Sat, 13 Jul 2013 17:12:47 -0500</pubDate>
  <link></link>
  <title><![CDATA[Structural polymorphism analysis from NGS data]]></title>
  <description><![CDATA[
<p>The LabEx BASC (Biodiversity, Agroecosystems, Society, Climate), a network of 13 laboratories of the Paris-Saclay Scientific Cluster, is seeking a bioinformatician to analyze Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) data analysis. In the context of a flagship project aiming at understanding and improving the adaptive capacity of agroecosystems it will be critical to establish a link between sequence variation, functional variation, gene/protein expression and phenotypic adaptation.</p>

<p>The successful candidate will be in charge of the detection of polymorphisms including structural variants, of the comparison of multiple and diverse genomes of a same species and of the construction of pan- and core-genomes. These challenging tasks will require bioinformatics developments and implementation of methods for accommodating the high level of repetitiveness of complex genomes. The tools will be integrated into pipelines and made available to end-users through the Galaxy platform. The bioinformatician will therefore also have to provide researchers with advices on their experimental designs in order to ensure compliance of produced datasets with pipelines requirements. He/she will be hosted by a bioinformatics/informatics team (7 people) (http://moulon.inra.fr/index.php/fr/equipestransversales/atelier-de-bioinformatique) which has computational facilities and expertise in NGS data analysis, and will benefit as well from national and international collaborative networks (Aplibio http://www.renabi.fr/platforms/aplibio/, Transplant http://transplantdb.eu, AMAIZING http://www.amaizing.fr/).</p>

<p>The position requires a doctoral degree (PhD) in bioinformatics with strong expertise in script writing (Python/Perl) and pipeline development. </p>

<p>Applicants should send a CV and the names of 2 referees willing to provide a letter of recommendation to joets@moulon.inra.fr.</p>
]]></description>
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	<guid isPermaLink="true">https://bioinformaticsonline.com/bookmarks/view/32399/mapping-ngs</guid>
	<pubDate>Tue, 02 May 2017 07:58:07 -0500</pubDate>
	<link>https://bioinformaticsonline.com/bookmarks/view/32399/mapping-ngs</link>
	<title><![CDATA[Mapping NGS]]></title>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>NGS data are just a bunch of sequences, you have no idea which region in the genome each sequences comes from, which gene it represents...<br>To know that you have to align the sequences to the reference sequence. The reference sequence is in most cases the full genome sequence but sometimes, a library of EST sequences is used.<br>In either way, aligning your sequence reads to the reference sequence is called mapping.</p>
<p>The most used mappers of DNA-seq data are&nbsp;<a href="http://bio-bwa.sourceforge.net/" target="_blank">BWA</a>&nbsp;and&nbsp;<a href="http://bowtie-bio.sourceforge.net/bowtie2/index.shtml" target="_blank">Bowtie</a>&nbsp;for DNA-Seq data and&nbsp;<a href="http://tophat.cbcb.umd.edu/" target="_blank">Tophat</a>,&nbsp;<a href="https://github.com/alexdobin/STAR" target="_blank">STAR</a>&nbsp;or&nbsp;<a href="http://www.ccb.jhu.edu/software/hisat/index.shtml" target="_blank">HISAT</a>&nbsp;for RNA-Seq data. Mappers differ in which options they can take in, how fast and how accurate they are. Bowtie is faster than BWA, but looses some sensitivity (does not map an equal amount of reads to the correct position in the genome).</p><p>Address of the bookmark: <a href="http://wiki.bits.vib.be/index.php/Mapping_of_NGS_data" rel="nofollow">http://wiki.bits.vib.be/index.php/Mapping_of_NGS_data</a></p>]]></description>
	<dc:creator>Abhimanyu Singh</dc:creator>
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