Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Introduction to Bioinformatics Lecturer: Prof. Yael Mandel-Gutfreund Teaching Assistance: Rachelly Normand Olga Karinski Course web site :

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Introduction to Bioinformatics Lecturer: Prof. Yael Mandel-Gutfreund Teaching Assistance: Rachelly Normand Olga Karinski Course web site :"— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to Bioinformatics Lecturer: Prof. Yael Mandel-Gutfreund Teaching Assistance: Rachelly Normand Olga Karinski Course web site : http://webcourse.cs.technion.ac.il/236523

2 2 What is Bioinformatics?

3 3 Course Objectives To introduce the bioinfomatics discipline To make the students familiar with the major biological questions which can be addressed by bioinformatics tools To introduce the major tools used for sequence and structure analysis and explain in general how they work (limitation etc..)

4 4 Course Structure and Requirements 1.Class Structure 1.2 hours lecture 2.1 hour tutorial 2. Home work Homework assignments will be given every second week The homework will be done in pairs. 4/4 homework assignments will be submitted 2. A final project will be conducted in pairs * Project will be presented as a poster –poster day 9.3

5 5 Grading 20 % Homework assignments 80 % final project (10% proposal, 20% supervisor evaluation 70% poster presentation)

6 6 What is Bioinformatics?

7 7 “The field of science in which biology, computer science, and information technology merge to form a single discipline” Ultimate goal: to enable the discovery of new biological insights as well as to create a global perspective from which unifying principles in biology can be discerned. What is Bioinformatics?

8 8 Central Paradigm in Molecular Biology mRNAGene (DNA)Protein 21 ST centaury GenomeTranscriptomeProteome

9 9 From DNA to Genome Watson and Crick DNA model 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985

10 10 1995 1990 2000 First human genome draft First genome Hemophilus Influenzae Yeast genome Total complete genomes 15.10.15 = 21,636

11 11 Main Goal: To understand the living cell AnnotationComparative genomics Functional genomics 21000 genomes… What’s Next ? The “post-genomics” era Systems Biology

12 And beyond… Personalized medicine 12

13 From ….21000 genomes To…Understanding living cells

14 14 CCTGACAAATTCGACGTGCGGCATTGCATGCAGACGTGCATG CGTGCAAATAATCAATGTGGACTTTTCTGCGATTATGGAAGAA CTTTGTTACGCGTTTTTGTCATGGCTTTGGTCCCGCTTTGTTC AGAATGCTTTTAATAAGCGGGGTTACCGGTTTGGTTAGCGAGA AGAGCCAGTAAAAGACGCAGTGACGGAGATGTCTGATG CAA TAT GGA CAA TTG GTT TCT TCT CTG AAT.................... TGAAAAACGTA Annotation

15 15 Annotation Identify the genes within a given sequence of DNA Identify the sites Which regulate the gene Predict the function What do they do???

16 16 How do we identify a new gene in a genome? A gene is characterized by several features (promoter, ORF…) some are easier and some harder to detect…

17 17 Using Bioinformatics approaches for Gene hunting Relative easy in simple organisms (e.g. bacteria) Still VERY HARD for higher organism (e.g. humans)

18 18 Comparative genomics

19 19 Comparison between the full drafts of the human and chimp genomes revealed that they differ only by 1.23% How can we be so similar--and yet so different? How humans are chimps? Perhaps not surprising!!!

20 20 Where are we different ?? Where are we similar ??? VERY SIMAILAR Conserved between many organisms VERY DIFFERENT

21 21 Human ATAGCGGGGGGATGCGGGCCCTATACCC Chimp ATAGGGG--GGATGCGGGCCCTATACCC Mouse ATAGCG---GGATGCGGCGC-TATACC-A Human ATAGCGGGGGGATGCGGGCCCTATACCC Chimp ATAGGGGGGATGCGGGCCCTATACCC Mouse ATAGCGGGATGCGGCGCTATACCA Sometime minor changes in critical genes can make a big difference

22 22 Single change in a genes among humans can be responsible for sever diseases Sickle Cell Anemia Due to 1 swapping of an A for a T Image source: http://www.cc.nih.gov/ccc/ccnews/nov99/

23 23 Healthy Individual >gi|28302128|ref|NM_000518.4| Homo sapiens hemoglobin, beta (HBB), mRNA ACATTTGCTTCTGACACAACTGTGTTCACTAGCAACCTCAAACAGACACCATGGTGCATCTGACTCCTGA GG A GAAGTCTGCCGTTACTGCCCTGTGGGGCAAGGTGAACGTGGATGAAGTTGGTGGTGAGGCCCTGGGC AGGCTGCTGGTGGTCTACCCTTGGACCCAGAGGTTCTTTGAGTCCTTTGGGGATCTGTCCACTCCTGATG CTGTTATGGGCAACCCTAAGGTGAAGGCTCATGGCAAGAAAGTGCTCGGTGCCTTTAGTGATGGCCTGGC TCACCTGGACAACCTCAAGGGCACCTTTGCCACACTGAGTGAGCTGCACTGTGACAAGCTGCACGTGGAT CCTGAGAACTTCAGGCTCCTGGGCAACGTGCTGGTCTGTGTGCTGGCCCATCACTTTGGCAAAGAATTCA CCCCACCAGTGCAGGCTGCCTATCAGAAAGTGGTGGCTGGTGTGGCTAATGCCCTGGCCCACAAGTATCA CTAAGCTCGCTTTCTTGCTGTCCAATTTCTATTAAAGGTTCCTTTGTTCCCTAAGTCCAACTACTAAACT GGGGGATATTATGAAGGGCCTTGAGCATCTGGATTCTGCCTAATAAAAAACATTTATTTTCATTGC >gi|4504349|ref|NP_000509.1| beta globin [Homo sapiens] MVHLTP E EKSAVTALWGKVNVDEVGGEALGRLLVVYPWTQRFFESFGDLSTPDAVMGNPKVKAHGKKVLG AFSDGLAHLDNLKGTFATLSELHCDKLHVDPENFRLLGNVLVCVLAHHFGKEFTPPVQAAYQKVVAGVAN ALAHKYH

24 24 Diseased Individual >gi|28302128|ref|NM_000518.4| Homo sapiens hemoglobin, beta (HBB), mRNA ACATTTGCTTCTGACACAACTGTGTTCACTAGCAACCTCAAACAGACACCATGGTGCATCTGACTCCTGA GG T GAAGTCTGCCGTTACTGCCCTGTGGGGCAAGGTGAACGTGGATGAAGTTGGTGGTGAGGCCCTGGGC AGGCTGCTGGTGGTCTACCCTTGGACCCAGAGGTTCTTTGAGTCCTTTGGGGATCTGTCCACTCCTGATG CTGTTATGGGCAACCCTAAGGTGAAGGCTCATGGCAAGAAAGTGCTCGGTGCCTTTAGTGATGGCCTGGC TCACCTGGACAACCTCAAGGGCACCTTTGCCACACTGAGTGAGCTGCACTGTGACAAGCTGCACGTGGAT CCTGAGAACTTCAGGCTCCTGGGCAACGTGCTGGTCTGTGTGCTGGCCCATCACTTTGGCAAAGAATTCA CCCCACCAGTGCAGGCTGCCTATCAGAAAGTGGTGGCTGGTGTGGCTAATGCCCTGGCCCACAAGTATCA CTAAGCTCGCTTTCTTGCTGTCCAATTTCTATTAAAGGTTCCTTTGTTCCCTAAGTCCAACTACTAAACT GGGGGATATTATGAAGGGCCTTGAGCATCTGGATTCTGCCTAATAAAAAACATTTATTTTCATTGC >gi|4504349|ref|NP_000509.1| beta globin [Homo sapiens] MVHLTP V EKSAVTALWGKVNVDEVGGEALGRLLVVYPWTQRFFESFGDLSTPDAVMGNPKVKAHGKKVLG AFSDGLAHLDNLKGTFATLSELHCDKLHVDPENFRLLGNVLVCVLAHHFGKEFTPPVQAAYQKVVAGVAN ALAHKYH

25 25 Functional genomics

26 26 TO BE IS NOT ENOUGH Expressed Not Expressed (תאי גזע עובריים)(תאים ממוינים)

27 The difference in the brain size between Human and apes is mainly related to the different levels of the genes expression and not their content

28 28 Systems Biology

29 Jeong et al. Nature 411, 41 - 42 (2001) Biological networks

30 What can we learn from Biological Networks Is the protein essential for the organism ? Is it a good drug targets? What can we learn about this protein

31 How can bioinformatics contribute to Medicine? http://www.tedmed.com/talks/show?id=17961 31

32 What of all this will we learn in the course? 32 The course will concentrate on the bioinformatics tools and databases which are used to : - Annotate genes, - Compare genes and genomes - Infer the function of the genes and proteins - Analyze the interactions between genes and proteins ETC….

33 33 1. Introduction to bioinformatics 2. Pairwise alignment 3. Database search 4. Protein alignments 5. MSA and phylogenetic analysis 6. Sequencing 7. Motif search-function prediction 8. Gene expression 9. Structural bioinformatics (proteins and RNA) 10. Biological networks What of all this will we learn in the course?


Download ppt "Introduction to Bioinformatics Lecturer: Prof. Yael Mandel-Gutfreund Teaching Assistance: Rachelly Normand Olga Karinski Course web site :"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google