Date & Time
November 15, 2023
1-5PM PST, Reception to follow
Location
M1-A305/A307 Fred Hutch Arnold Building
Date & Time
November 15, 2023
1-5PM PST, Reception to follow
Location
M1-A305/A307 Fred Hutch Arnold Building
Registration is now CLOSED
Agenda
12:30 - 1:00 | Registration
1:00 - 1:05 | Danny Miller, MD, PhD, University of Washington | Welcoming Remarks
1:05 - 1:30 | Mitchell Vollger, PhD, University of Washington | Fibertools: fast and accurate DNA-m6A calling using single-molecule long-read sequencing
1:30 - 1:55 | Jeff Nivala, PhD, University of Washington | Progress towards single-molecule, long-read protein sequencing using nanopore arrays
1:55 - 2:20 | Cate Paschal, PhD, FACMG, Seattle Children’s Hospital | Comparison of long read sequencing with clinical testing for Prader-Willi and Angelman syndromes
2:20 - 2:45 | Chia-Lin Wei, PhD, University of Washington | Advancing Ultra Long-read Sequencing for Structural Variation Characterization in Human Genomes
2:45 - 3:00 | Break
3:00 - 3:15 | Oxford Nanopore Technologies
3:15 - 3:30 | Alex Zevin, PhD, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center | Overview of the Fred Hutch Genomics and Bioinformatics Shared Resource
3:30 - 3:55 | Debarshi Mustafi, MD, PhD, University of Washington | Targeted long-read sequencing allows for comprehensive profiling of retinal disease variants
3:55 - 4:15 | Christian Gallardo, PhD, Seattle Children’s Hospital | Quantitative full-length sequencing of the HIV-1 transcriptome in primary cell derived resting CD4+ T-cells and T-cell subsets
4:15 - 4:35 | Paul Valdmanis, PhD, University of Washington | Massive Expansion of a Denisovan Introgressed Variable Number Tandem Repeat in Ancient Americans
4:35 - 4:55 | Andrew Stergachis, MD, PhD, University of Washington | Resolving the contribution of non-coding variation to human disease using long-read multi-omics
4:55| Danny Miller | Closing Remarks
5:00 | Reception
The 2023 Long-Read Sequencing Symposium will be hosted by the Brotman Baty Institute and held on November 15th, 2023 at Arnold Building Fred Hutch.
The goal of this symposium is to bring together Seattle-area users of long-read sequencing to learn from each other, build new collaborations, and to explore potential synergies among users.
*Please contact us if you want to attend virtually
Invited Speakers:
Speakers will be added as confirmed
Important Dates:
If you have any questions, please contact bbi-events@uw.edu
This event is sponsored by Oxford Nanopore Technologies