Organized by IBM Research – Haifa and Edmond J. Safra Center for Bioinformatics at Tel-Aviv University
You are cordially invited to participate in a one-day symposium on clinical genomic analysis, to be held Wednesday, May 25, 2016 at the IBM Research lab in Haifa.
This full-day workshop will provide a forum for the research and development communities from both academia and industry to share their work, exchange ideas, and discuss issues, problems, and works-in-progress. The forum will also address future research directions and trends in the area of personalized healthcare and the use of "omics" and Big Data technologies for optimizing the individual care.
A special focus of this year's workshop will be clinical metagenomics and, specifically, the interplay between microbial communities and the human host and its effect on our health and behavior.
The workshop will take place in the auditorium of IBM Research – Haifa on the University of Haifa campus, from 09:30 to 16:30. Lunch and light refreshments will be served. Participation is free but registration is required.
Parking is available in the IBM parking lot following registration.
Please confirm your participation by May 24, 2016, via the symposium registration page.
Local Arrangements
Yael Hay-Karsenty, IBM Research - Haifa
Program
09:30 |
Registration |
---|---|
10:00 |
Welcome |
Session 1 |
|
10:05 |
Improving health - IBM Agenda |
10:35 |
Evolution of Bacterial Pathogens,
Abstract: Antibiotic resistance is growing
as a major public health concern. In the talk, I
will present our combined
theoretical-experimental-clinical efforts towards
understanding, predicting and manipulating the
evolution of antibiotic resistance. Novel
experimental devices for laboratory evolution of
drug resistance now allow us to unravel the
genotypic diversity of multi-step adaptive paths
to antibiotic resistance. Some of the laboratory
concepts can be translated into the much more
complex environment of infections within humans,
where whole-genome sequencing of clinical isolates
can reveal pathogen spread and evolution. Finally,
I will present experimental tests of drug
combinations and alternating treatments that are
more resilient to evolution of antibiotic
resistance. My hope is that these experimental and
theoretical directions will help lead towards a
new paradigm for genome-based diagnostics of
microbial infections and guided treatments that
are more resilient to evolution of resistance.
|
11:00 |
Identification and Visualization of Splicing
Bias from Single Cell RNA Sequencing,
Abstract: Single cell RNA sequencing
(scRNA-seq) has revolutionized the understanding
of cell population heterogeneity in many
biological fields, including immunology. While the
number of available scRNA-seq datasets increases
fast, the availability of analysis methods is
lagging behind. We have created JingleBells, a
repository of publicly available scRNA-seq
datasets in a uniform annotated BAM format. That
format is readily visible in IGV, a popular tool
for RNA-seq visualization. This repository is
accompanied by a suit of methods to identify
splicing bias, where the single cell isoform usage
is significantly different from the population
level usage. I will describe the methods and their
application to several publicly available immune
datasets, and identify cases where isoforms usage
is regulated at the single cell level by a
non-negligible proportion of the cells.
|
11:25 |
Break |
Session 2 |
|
12:00 |
Towards Deciphering the Functional Genetics and
Neo-antigenic Landscape in Melanoma, |
12:25 |
The Genetics of MVP – Using Rapid Parallel
Sequencing for Mutation Detection,
Abstract: Mitral valve prolapse (MVP) is a
common cardiac valve disease that affects nearly 1
in 40 individuals. It can manifest as mitral
regurgitation and is the leading indication for
mitral valve surgery. Despite a clear heritable
component, the genetic aetiology leading to
non-syndromic MVP has remained elusive for many
years. Four affected individuals from a large
multigenerational family segregating non-syndromic
MVP underwent capture sequencing of the linked
interval on chromosome 11. Using DNA enrichment of
linked choromosomal sequcne and massive parallel
sequencing allowed us to fine a missense mutation
in the DCHS1 gene, the human homologue of the
Drosophila cell polarity gene dachsous (ds), that
segregates with MVP in the family. This mutatation
was further validated by morpholino knockdown of
the zebrafish homologue dachsous1b resulted in a
cardiac atrioventricular canal defect that could
be rescued by wild-type human DCHS1, but not by
DCHS1 messenger RNA with the familial mutation.
Further genetic studies identified two additional
families in which a second deleterious DCHS1
mutation segregates with MVP. Both DCHS1 mutations
reduce protein stability as demonstrated in
zebrafish, cultured cells and, notably, in mitral
valve interstitial cells (MVICs) obtained during
mitral valve repair surgery of a proband.
Dchs1(+/-) mice had prolapse of thickened mitral
leaflets, which could be traced back to
developmental errors in valve morphogenesis. DCHS1
deficiency in MVP patient MVICs, as well as in
Dchs1(+/-) mouse MVICs, result in altered
migration and cellular patterning, supporting
these processes as aetiological underpinnings for
the disease. This study demonstrate the power of
new generation sequencing in elucidating mutation
causing complex diseases.
|
12:50 |
Keynote: The Danish National Biobank and health
Register Information: When an Entire Country is
a Cohort Study, |
13:30 |
Lunch |
Session 3 |
|
14:30 |
The Growing Role of Exogenous Data in
Healthcare, |
14:55 |
Enhancer Methylation Dynamics Contribute to
Cancer Plasticity and Patient Mortality,
Abstract: During development enhancers play
pivotal roles in regulating gene expression
programs; however, their involvement in cancer
progression has not been fully characterized. We
performed an integrative analysis of DNA
methylation, RNA-seq and small RNA-seq profiles
from thousands of patients, including 25 diverse
primary malignances and 7 body sites of metastatic
melanoma. We found that enhancers are consistently
the most differentially methylated regions (DMR)
as cancer progress from normal to primary tumors
and then to metastases, compared to other genomic
features. Remarkably, identification of enhancer
DMRs (eDMRs) enabled classification of primary
tumors according to physiological organ systems
and in metastasis eDMRs are the most correlated
with patient outcome. To further understand eDMR
role in cancer progression we developed a model to
predict genes and microRNAs that are regulated by
enhancer and not promotor methylation, which shows
high accuracy with chromatin architecture methods
and was experimentally validated. Interestingly,
among all metastatic melanoma eDMRs the most
correlated with patient survival were eDMRs that
'switched' their methylation patterns back and
forth between normal, primary and metastases and
target cancer drivers, e.g.: KIT. We further
demonstrated that eDMR target genes were modulated
in melanoma bone metastasis microenvironment,
suggesting that eDMRs respond to
microenvironmental cues in metastatic niches. Our
findings that aberrant methylation in cancer cells
mostly affects enhancers, which contribute to
tumor progression and cancer cell plasticity, will
facilitate development of epigenetic anticancer
approaches.
|
15:20 |
ERACoSysMed – Funding Opportunity in System
Biology,
Abstract: ERACoSysMed ("Collaboration on
systems medicine funding to promote the
implementation of systems biology approaches in
clinical research and medical practice") started
its activities in January 2015 as the first
ERA-Net on Systems Medicine under the EU framework
program Horizon2020. ERACoSysMed aims to enhance
the implementation of systems biology approaches
in both clinical research and medical practice
throughout Europe and Israel.
|
15:35 |
Integrated Genomic and Electronic Medical
Record Analyses Identify Dyslipidemia as a
Strong Inherited Risk Factor for Autism,
Abstract: Recent genomic studies have
revealed that the clinical heterogeneity
characterizing autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is
matched by extreme genetic heterogeneity.
Untangling this complexity-squared is essential
for improving ASD diagnosis and prognosis. Toward
this goal we integrated familial whole exome
sequences with neurodevelopmental expression
patterns to identify clusters of
neurodevelopmentally-coregulated, sexually
dimorphic, ASD-segregating deleterious variants.
While the function of most clusters converged on
previously described ASD etiologies (including
immune, synaptic, and transcriptional regulation
functions), 20% of the identified clusters were
enriched with lipid regulation functions. These
include sets of variants affecting low density
lipoprotein receptor (LDLR, P=1.93x10-7),
lipoprotein lipase (LPL, P=1.55x10-6), and
multiple coexpressed genes of the Reactome
metabolism of lipids and lipoprotein pathway
(P=2.95x10-5). Collectively, these variants are
predicted to lead to high cholesterol and
triglyceride levels. Therefore, we used electronic
medical records to examine blood lipid profiles of
children with ASD as compared to neurotypical
children. ASD was associated with elevated
triglycerides (OR=3.14, 95% CI=[2.44,4.03],
P=1.19x10-23), LDL (OR=1.78, 95% CI=[1.40,2.26],
P=6.42x10-7), and total cholesterol (OR=1.67, 95%
CI=[1.35,2.06], P=5.55x10-7). We further used
health claims data to compare the abundance of
dyslipidemia diagnoses in individuals with ASD,
unaffected siblings, and unrelated controls, and.
Children with ASD had a strong enrichment of
dyslipidemia diagnoses as compared to matched
controls (OR=1.95, 95% CI=[1.80,2.11],
P=1.94x10-65) as well as unaffected siblings
(OR=1.76, 95%CI= [1.61 1.92], P=2.25x10-36).
Finally, mouse models of dyslipidemia were found
to exhibit striking phenotypic similarities to
autism mouse models (power = 0.97). Taken
together, this work suggests that dyslipidemia
might be a strong inherited risk factor for a
subtype of ASD, opening new avenues for screening,
intervention, and prevention.
|
16:00 |
Closing Remarks, |
16:05 |
Demos and Reception |
Navigation
Program Committee
- Assaf Gottlieb
- Eran Halperin
- Ron Shamir
- Saharon Rosset
IBM Research - Haifa
Tel-Aviv University
Tel-Aviv University
Tel-Aviv University
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