Upcoming events hosted by or involving Genetics Otago will be listed here. Please check back regularly for updates. A calendar of events that may be of interest to our members can be found at the bottom of this page and in the sidebar of other pages on this site, please note that this includes events hosted outside of Genetics Otago.
GO Annual Symposium
Genetics Otago has partnered with the Australasian Epigenetics Alliance to bring the AEpiA Conference to NZ for the first time, held 1st – 5th December 2024. The GO Symposium will begin with a shared session with the AEpiA delegates on the morning of the 5th of December and will then continue in its regular format for the remainder of the day.
As usual, the Symposium will highlight the fantastic research being done by GO members from around the country through presentations, posters and awards.
Date: Thursday 5th December 2024
Time: 9:00 am – 5:00 pm
Venue: Hutton Theatre, Otago Museum (for those joining from Christchurch and Wellington – a venue will be confirmed soon).
Programme
A draft programme will be available here soon.
Registration
Registration for this event is now open via the button below.
Abstract submission is part of the registration process, all abstracts must be submitted by no later than 5:00 pm on the 14th of November. Registration will close at 12:00 noon on Wednesday 20th November. Please keep the link provided at the end of your registration to make changes to your responses up until the closing date.
Registration Fee
Due to budget constraints, we will be charging a $50 per person registration fee for all attendees to subsidise the costs associated with the Symposium. We have received confirmation that this registration fee can be paid from S accounts, and if you are in a position to make a donation on top of this fee, we would gladly receive it. However, we do not want the payment to be a barrier to attendance, so if you are not in a position to make a payment, please contact us go@otago.ac.nz.
Payment Methods
Payments from an S account (or other University account) can be journaled to Genetics Otago account GL.10.LH.A14.2541 via your finance associate. Please include the surname(s) of the registrants that the payment covers in the narration.
If you need to make payment using funds from outside the University this can be arranged via the Cashier’s Office. Please contact us for details (go@otago.ac.nz).
Awards
The Annual Genetics Otago Awards including The Genetics Otago Award, Outstanding Mentor Awards, Student Supervisor Award, Publication Awards, Poster Awards and Science Communication Prize will be presented at the conclusion of the Symposium and nominations for these are now open.
Award nominations close at 12:00 noon on Wednesday 20th November (except for Poster and Science Communication Awards which are at 5 pm 14th of November) and should be submitted by email to go@otago.ac.nz.
Full details of the awards can be found here: Award Details.
Oxford Nanopore Technology Workshop
Join us at Ōtākou Whakaihu Waka, Dunedin, for a one day Oxford Nanopore Technology symposium. This event, jointly hosted by Genomics Aotearoa and the Genetics Otago ONT hub, will feature research talks highlighting different ONT use cases, a technical sequencing demonstration and an EPI2ME workshop.
This is an in-person event being held on Friday, December 6th at the Ōtākou Whakaihu Waka / University of Otago campus.
Registration for this event is free of charge.
This event is sponsored by ONT, and is supported by the Otago Genomics Facility.
Contact tyler.mcinnes@otago.ac.nz for any queries.
CRISPR Workshop
Details coming soon. Proposed date: 6th December.
Calendar of Events
The below is a calendar of events hosted by GO as well as events hosted by others that may be of interest to our members. If you have an event you would like us to include please contact us here.
This workshop, taught by Professor Mik Black, will introduce skills and tools required for the analysis of single-cell RNA-seq data (scRNA-seq data) in R. The workshop will be taught online over four half-days, on May 8th, 9th, 15th and 16th (9am – 1pm). You should attend all 4 sessions.
This is an advanced workshop which requires an intermediate level of R knowledge and experience. To participate in this workshop you must have either completed the Genomics Aotearoa Intermediate R workshop, or have an equivalent level of experience (e.g., be a semi-regular R user). Because of the complexity of this workshop we will not have the time or resources to solve coding errors. However, the focus of this workshop will be on the concepts and discussion of the statistical methodology rather than your ability to code quickly.
Because we expect a high level of interest in this workshop and we have limited spaces, we are inviting expressions of interest no later than Friday April 26th and will select a group of attendees based on needs and experience. We will endeavour to maximise the overall positive impact on research in Aotearoa and distribute this training as fairly as possible. You will be advised whether you are able to attend the training by end of day Monday April 29th.
If we are not able to offer you a space in this training, you will be kept informed about future options for scRNA-seq training.
What will this workshop cover?
- Alignment and feature counting with Cell Ranger (briefly).
- QC and exploratory analysis.
- Normalisation.
- Sctransform: Variant Stabilising transformation.
- Feature selection and dimensionality reduction.
- Batch correction and data set integration.
- Clustering.
- Identification of cluster marker genes.
- Differential gene expression analysis.
- Differential abundance.
*Note that some of this material may be mentioned only briefly due to time constraints, in which case you will be pointed towards supplementary material for self-guided learning.
If you have any questions about this workshop, please contact Genomics Aotearoa Training Coordinator Dr Tyler McInnes (tyler.mcinnes@otago.ac.nz).
This workshop, taught by Professor Mik Black, will introduce skills and tools required for the analysis of single-cell RNA-seq data (scRNA-seq data) in R. The workshop will be taught online over four half-days, on May 8th, 9th, 15th and 16th (9am – 1pm). You should attend all 4 sessions.
This is an advanced workshop which requires an intermediate level of R knowledge and experience. To participate in this workshop you must have either completed the Genomics Aotearoa Intermediate R workshop, or have an equivalent level of experience (e.g., be a semi-regular R user). Because of the complexity of this workshop we will not have the time or resources to solve coding errors. However, the focus of this workshop will be on the concepts and discussion of the statistical methodology rather than your ability to code quickly.
Because we expect a high level of interest in this workshop and we have limited spaces, we are inviting expressions of interest no later than Friday April 26th and will select a group of attendees based on needs and experience. We will endeavour to maximise the overall positive impact on research in Aotearoa and distribute this training as fairly as possible. You will be advised whether you are able to attend the training by end of day Monday April 29th.
If we are not able to offer you a space in this training, you will be kept informed about future options for scRNA-seq training.
What will this workshop cover?
- Alignment and feature counting with Cell Ranger (briefly).
- QC and exploratory analysis.
- Normalisation.
- Sctransform: Variant Stabilising transformation.
- Feature selection and dimensionality reduction.
- Batch correction and data set integration.
- Clustering.
- Identification of cluster marker genes.
- Differential gene expression analysis.
- Differential abundance.
*Note that some of this material may be mentioned only briefly due to time constraints, in which case you will be pointed towards supplementary material for self-guided learning.
If you have any questions about this workshop, please contact Genomics Aotearoa Training Coordinator Dr Tyler McInnes (tyler.mcinnes@otago.ac.nz).
A reminder about this week’s Genomics Aotearoa seminar, online Friday, May 31 at 3pm.
We welcome Dafni Anastasiadi (Plant and Food Research). Dafni will be talking on Epigenetic clocks for age prediction.
Please invite colleagues to join our genomics community and take part in this seminar. Look forward to seeing you there. Questions and discussions are welcome.
Join from PC, Mac, iOS, or Android:
https://otago.zoom.us/j/97097442106?pwd=RlczU3VCdFBmbmt4Yng4VW5OcHdSdz09
About Dafni
Dafni Anastasiadi is a scientist at Plant and Food Research, Nelson. Her research interests focus on the role of epigenetics in eco-evolutionary processes using marine species as models. Her work has produced results with far-reaching implications in the epigenetics field, including the first epigenetic clock to accurately predict age in fish.
WORKSHOP: Reproducible Bioinformatics with Nextflow and nf-core
This online workshop is delivered by Genomics Aotearoa and NeSI, and will be taught from 10:00am to 4:00pm NZT on Wednesday the 5th of June, 2024, and is for New Zealand researchers interested in learning to use Nextflow.
Register for Reproducible Bioinformatics with Nextflow and nf-core
Nextflow is a management software system which facilitates the writing of scalable and reproducible scientific workflows. As a management system, Nextflow will simplify the development, monitoring, execution and sharing of pipelines. Using Nextflow will improve the reproducibility, portability, and run time of tasks.
Nextflow can integrate pipelines written in common scripting languages such as R and Python and couple these with environment management systems such as Docker, Singularity and Conda. Nextflow uses Domain Specific Language (DSL) which makes running workflows on cloud or high-performance computing (HPC) infrastructure easy.
This workshop will also introduce nf-core: a community-driven repository of peer-reviewed best practice analysis pipelines written in Nextflow.
This workshop is comprised of three sections:
Section 1
– An introduction to Nextflow.
– Useful terminology.
– Working in the Nextflow environment.
Section 2
– An introduction to nf-core – a repository of existing pipelines.
– General structure of a pipeline.
– Running and customising your first pipeline.
Section 3
– Customising and configuring pipelines.
– Metrics and shareable reports.
Setup
This is a fully online, hands-on workshop. This workshop material will be run on the NeSI OpenOnDemand training environment – there is no need to install any software for this workshop. Instructions on how to access the training platform will be sent out with the confirmation letter to registrants.
Participants must have their own laptops and plan to participate actively. You will require a working web browser.
Prerequisites: You must have basic command line (Bash) skills to participate in this workshop.
If you have any questions about these workshops, including whether they are suitable for you, please contact tyler.mcinnes@otago.ac.nz.
This online workshop is delivered by Genomics Aotearoa and NeSI, and will be taught from 10:00am-4:00pm NZT on Wednesday the 17th of July, 2024, and is for New Zealand researchers interested in learning R. This workshop functions as a prerequisite for the RNA-seq Data Analysis workshop, and the material provides a basis for many workflows in R.
Some of the topics covered in the workshop are:
– An introduction to R and RStudio.
– R basics: The R language, reading data into R, storing data as objects.
– R packages.
– Publication-quality data presentation using ggplot2.
– Knitr: keep track of workflow and produce easy-to-follow reports of your work.
– Where to get more help when you are ready to do more.
We assume the learner has no prior experience with the tools covered in the workshop. However, learners are expected to have some familiarity with biological concepts.
Setup
This is a fully online, hands-on workshop. This workshop material will be run on the NeSI High Performance Computing (HPC) platforms – there is no need to install any software for this workshop. Instructions on how to access the NeSI HPC service will be sent out with the confirmation letter to registrants.
The material for this workshop can be previewed here:
https://genomicsaotearoa.github.io/Introduction-to-R/
Participants must have their own laptops and plan to participate actively. You will require a working web browser.
If you have any questions about these workshops, including whether they are suitable for you, please contact tyler.mcinnes@otago.ac.nz.
We are delighted to invite you the Genomics Aotearoa seminar series.
Professor Scott V. Edwards will be presenting a talk on Peering into the lives of the little bush moa (Anomalopteryx didiformis) and relatives through their genomes
Because of time zones, this seminar will be held earlier than usual.
Please join us on Friday, July 19th at 12pm (NZT).
Scott V. Edwards is Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology and Curator of Ornithology in the Museum of Comparative Zoology and is currently Chair of the Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University. Scott is an evolutionary biologist, with diverse interests in molecular evolution, phylogenetics, comparative genomics and population genetics. His research uses birds as model systems, focusing on their evolutionary history, phylogeography and genome evolution. His current work focuses on using phylogenetic trees and statistical models to link genomic and phenotypic variation. Scott has served as President of the Society for the Study of Evolution, and the Society of Systematic Biologists, and has served on the Advisory Boards of the National Museum of Natural History (Smithsonian) and the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. In 2015 he gave a multi-city lecture tour of Aotearoa, New Zealand, focusing on the imprints of dinosaur ancestry on the genomes of modern birds. From 2013-2015 Scott served as Division Director of the Division of Biological Infrastructure at the US National Science Foundation, where he facilitated funding in areas such as undergraduate research experiences, supporting biological collections and major infrastructure and bioinformatics. He also has led efforts to increase the diversity of undergraduates in evolutionary biology and biodiversity science.
Questions and discussions are welcome. We encourage you to invite colleagues to join our genomics community and take part in this seminar. Look forward to seeing you there.
Join from PC, Mac, iOS, or Android:
https://otago.zoom.us/j/97097442106?pwd=RlczU3VCdFBmbmt4Yng4VW5OcHdSdz09
This online workshop is delivered by Genomics Aotearoa and NeSI, and will be taught from 10:00am-4:00pm NZT on Wednesday the 24th of July, 2024, and is for New Zealand researchers interested in advancing their skills with R.
This is an intermediate workshop, please check you meet the Prerequisites: Attendees must have introductory knowledge of R and be well versed in tidyverse (Intro to R + supplementary materials in that workshop). We expect that you will either have completed our Introduction to R workshop or have sufficient experience of your own.
Some of the topics covered in the workshop are:
– Introduction to relational data and the join function.
– Working with regular expressions and functions from the stringr package.
– Writing custom functions, working with conditional statements.
– ‘Defensive programming’.
– Iterations – for loops, and map_*() functions.
– The importance of data structure in R.
Setup
This is a fully online, hands-on workshop. This workshop material will be run on the NeSI High Performance Computing (HPC) platforms – there is no need to install any software for this workshop. Instructions on how to access the NeSI HPC service will be sent out with the confirmation letter to registrants.
The material for this workshop can be previewed here.
Participants must have their own laptops and plan to participate actively. You will require a working web browser.
If you have any questions about these workshops, including whether they are suitable for you, please contact tyler.mcinnes@otago.ac.nz.
This online workshop will be taught on Wednesday 31st of July, 2024 10:00am-4:00pm NZT and is for New Zealand researchers interested in learning to use the command line.
The focus of this workshop is on working with the command line, also called The Shell.
Some of the topics covered in this workshop are:
An introduction to the Shell, including why this is such a powerful tool.
File navigation, how to navigate directories.
How to interact with files – copy or rename files in bulk. Automation reduces user error and saves time.
Redirection: passing information from one command to another to create useful chains of commands.
Writing scripts which can be executed to quickly and easily reproduce analyses.
This lesson assumes learner has no prior experience with the tools covered in the workshop.
Setup
This is a fully online, hands-on workshop. This workshop material will be run on the NeSI High Performance Computing (HPC) platforms – there is no need to install any software for this workshop. Instructions on how to access the NeSI HPC service will be sent out with the confirmation letter to registrants.
The material for this workshop can be previewed here.
Participants must have their own laptops and plan to participate actively. You will require a working web browser.
If you have any questions about these workshops, including whether they are suitable for you, please contact tyler.mcinnes@otago.ac.nz.
We are delighted to invite you Genomics Aotearoa’s seminar, on Friday, August 2nd, 3-4pm.
Dr Karla Araya Castro will be presenting For Humans, Plants, and Genomics: Communication is the Key
Questions and discussions are welcome. We encourage you to invite colleagues to join our genomics community and take part in this seminar. Look forward to seeing you there.
Join from PC, Mac, iOS, or Android:
https://otago.zoom.us/j/97097442106?pwd=RlczU3VCdFBmbmt4Yng4VW5OcHdSdz09
Karla Araya Castro is a biotechnologist with a Master’s and PhD in Natural Resources Science. She is currently a visiting postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Biochemistry in the School of Biomedical Sciences at the University of Otago. Her research focuses on nanotechnology applied to plants, specifically using lipid-based nanoparticles for the delivery of specific plant miRNAs.
In parallel with her scientific career, Karla has gained extensive experience in social entrepreneurship and product development across various industries.
In Chile, while completing her undergraduate degree at Universidad de La Frontera, Karla led projects that extended beyond her passion for science. In 2009, she applied to the Melton Foundation and became part of a large international network that actively promotes global citizenship as a way for individuals and organizations to collaborate across boundaries of place and identity to address global challenges. Through this network, Karla participated in various social and intercultural projects and had the opportunity to travel to Germany and China, where she not only gained invaluable knowledge and experience but also came to understand that disability is a matter of context rather than individual limitations.
In 2010, alongside her undergraduate studies, she completed a Diploma in Democratic Leadership. Upon graduating with a degree in Biotechnology, Karla was awarded the Faculty of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences Prize in recognition of her personal and academic qualities, and her special dedication to promoting the prestige of her career and faculty.
In 2014, she began her PhD studies, and during the same year, through her involvement with the Melton Foundation and the Climate Reality Project, she traveled to South Africa for training and mentoring in climate change at a conference led by Al Gore, former Vice President of the United States. In November of that same year, she traveled to Rio de Janeiro, where she served as a mentor for the development of new leaders in climate reality. In 2016, she represented the Melton Foundation in a D-Lab project, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) program designed to connect innovators from around the world to work on low-cost, high-impact technologies for communities. As part of this initiative, Karla also traveled to Zambia and participated in a co-design summit, where she and the Kafue community in Lusaka developed simple solutions to address contaminated water issues.
In 2018, she participated in a program to tackle industry-based challenges, from which she led the initiative “PicaPellet: A Sustainable Alternative for the Production of Solid Biofuel from Ulex europaeus” for a fuel company. In the same year, she received funding to start “InclusivApp,” an initiative aimed at bridging the information gap regarding urban accessibility in the city of Temuco. Through this project, she was recognized as one of the 100 Women Leaders in the La Araucanía region in 2020.
During the long lockdown in Chile due to COVID-19, she was a lecturer for a course she designed called “Science in Quarantine” at PROENTA-UFRO, a program for children and youth with academic talents.
Karla describes herself as a resilient and somewhat stubborn woman, a mother to Amelia and Máximo, a person with a physical disability, a wheelchair user, and a wine lover.
This online workshop is hosted by Genomics Aotearoa and NeSI. The workshop will be taught from 10:00am-4:00pm NZT on the 7th of August 2024 and is for New Zealand researchers interested in progressing their abilities with Shell.
This workshop will cover:
– An overview of the Shell, UNIX and Linux.
– Downloading data from a remote source and checking data integrity.
– Recap navigating files and directories, and commands used in routine tasks.
– Inspecting and manipulating data, part 1 (the head, less, grep, and sed commands).
– Inspecting and manipulating data, part 2 (using awk and bioawk to process text).
– Automating file processing.
– Challenges: solve example molecular biology problems using shell scripts.
This workshop assumes some familiarity with Shell. You will need to be able to do the following tasks via command line:
– Navigating files and directories.
– An understanding on full versus relative paths.
– Working with files and directories (examining files, creating, copying, moving and removing).
– Use a command line-based text editor such as nano.
And have a basic understanding of:
– File/directory permission in Linux.
– For loops (preferred, not required).
If you lack the above skills, you can use these sites as a refresher:
– Introduction to Command Line Carpentries lesson https://datacarpentry.org/shell-genomics/
Setup
This is a fully online, hands-on workshop. The workshop material will be run on the NeSI High Performance Computing (HPC) platforms – there is no need to install any software for this workshop. Instructions on how to access the NeSI HPC service will be sent out with the confirmation letter to registrants.
You can view the workshop material, including the objectives and content here.
Participants must have their own machine to work on and plan to participate actively in the workshop. You will require a working web browser.