WYMM Tour: Bonn
Tuesday 8th October 2024, 10:00 - 16:45 CET - Bonn, Germany (timings subject to change)
Generate ultra-rich data for answers with impact.
Who says you can’t see it all? With a comprehensive view of structural variants and methylation, nanopore technology powers the bigger and bolder research questions you’ve always wanted to ask.
Join us on Tuesday 8th October 2024 to hear from local experts who are breaking new ground in human genomics, using nanopore technology.
What you're missing matters. Stay on top of what's next.
Aside from talks ranging from human genomics for rare disease, to sequencing for cancer research, the full-day agenda will include networking breaks, Q&A, product displays, and opportunities to engage with your peers and nanopore experts.
Please note that this is an in-person event.
There is no delegate fee for this event, but registration is required. Lunch and refreshments will be provided. Your place at this event will be confirmed via email from events@nanoporetech.com.
Agenda below.
Agenda
10:00 — 16:45 | Agenda (subject to change) | Speaker |
---|---|---|
10:00 — 10:45 | Registration and breakfast | |
10:45 — 11:10 | Welcome | Daniel Mathow, Oxford Nanopore Technologies |
11:10 — 11:35 | Why size matters - long-read sequencing in rare disease | Florian Kraft, University Hospital RWTH Aachen /Institute for Human Genetics and Genomic Medicine |
11:35 — 12:00 | Nanopore at MedUni Vienna: tackling VNTRs & macrosatellites | Tamara Löwenstern, Medical University of Vienna, Austria |
12:00 — 13:30 | Lunch | |
13:30 — 13:55 | Bioinformatics update | Stephen Rudd, Oxford Nanopore Technologies |
13:55 — 14:20 | ONT sequencing of 1,019 samples from the 1000 Genomes Project | Tobias Rausch, European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL), Germany |
14:20 — 14:45 | From long reads to modified reads: selected use cases of nanopore sequencing in a broader clinical context | Charlotte Hewel, Mainz University |
14:45 — 15:30 | Networking session | |
15:30 — 16:00 | Panel Q&A session | Moderated by Cerissa French, Oxford Nanopore Technologies |
16:00 — 16:35 | Mitochondrial genetic modifiers in Parkinson's disease | Theresa Lüth, Institute of Neurogenetics, University of Lübeck |
16:35 — 16:45 | Closing remarks | Oxford Nanopore Technologies |
16:45 — 20:00 | Drinks reception and networking |
Speakers
Daniel Mathow, Sales Director, EMEAI Central, Oxford Nanopore Technologies
Phd and Postdoc in Molecular Biology and Genetics at DKFZ Heidelberg/Germany. 10 years commercial experience in companies offering genomic instrumentation and diagnostic tests.
Genetic diseases can be caused by different types of mutations. Most of these can now be identified by routine methods, e.g. (MS)-MLPA, microarray, exome sequencing and short-read genome sequencing. However, several methods are sometimes necessary to detect the different types of mutations. There are also limitations, e.g. in the exact determination of repeat lengths (RE), complex structural variants (SV) or paralogous genes. Using long-read sequencing technologies, it is now possible to overcome these limitations and detect all previously known mutation types with high sensitivity and precession. Thanks to improvements in throughput, costs and library preparation, long-read sequencing technologies can now be used routinely. Using various examples from routine diagnostics, the possible applications, advantages and disadvantages of nanopore sequencing are presented.
Genetic diseases can be caused by different types of mutations. Most of these can now be identified by routine methods, e.g. (MS)-MLPA, microarray, exome sequencing and short-read genome sequencing. However, several methods are sometimes necessary to detect the different types of mutations. There are also limitations, e.g. in the exact determination of repeat lengths (RE), complex structural variants (SV) or paralogous genes. Using long-read sequencing technologies, it is now possible to overcome these limitations and detect all previously known mutation types with high sensitivity and precession. Thanks to improvements in throughput, costs and library preparation, long-read sequencing technologies can now be used routinely. Using various examples from routine diagnostics, the possible applications, advantages and disadvantages of nanopore sequencing are presented.
Florian Kraft, University Hospital RWTH Aachen /Institute for Human Genetics and Genomic Medicine
VNTR: Mutations in the coding sequence within large variable number tandem repeats (VNTR) can lead to different monogenetic diseases. These mutations are impossible to detect by short-read sequencing due to their repetitive nature, and long-read variant callers might fail to detect the actual sequence change due to mapping inconsistency and the variability of the motif composition. We developed a pipeline for the detection of mutations and motif compositions within VNTRs using Oxford Nanopore sequencing. Samples are sequenced, mapped and phased across the whole VNTR. The extracted reads from each haplotype are then corrected, trimmed, and a consensus sequence assembled de novo. Using the consensus sequence, the motif composition of the VNTR is constructed visually. Macrosatellite - FSHD: FSHD is a very common form of muscular dystrophy caused by changes within a highly complex and large macrorepeat (D4Z4-repeat at the DUX4-gene) at the telomeric region of chromosome 4. This presents many challenges for genetic analysis. We have developed a potential approach using Nanopore-sequencing to help navigate this region. This allows for a subsequent more in-depth analysis based
VNTR: Mutations in the coding sequence within large variable number tandem repeats (VNTR) can lead to different monogenetic diseases. These mutations are impossible to detect by short-read sequencing due to their repetitive nature, and long-read variant callers might fail to detect the actual sequence change due to mapping inconsistency and the variability of the motif composition. We developed a pipeline for the detection of mutations and motif compositions within VNTRs using Oxford Nanopore sequencing. Samples are sequenced, mapped and phased across the whole VNTR. The extracted reads from each haplotype are then corrected, trimmed, and a consensus sequence assembled de novo. Using the consensus sequence, the motif composition of the VNTR is constructed visually. Macrosatellite - FSHD: FSHD is a very common form of muscular dystrophy caused by changes within a highly complex and large macrorepeat (D4Z4-repeat at the DUX4-gene) at the telomeric region of chromosome 4. This presents many challenges for genetic analysis. We have developed a potential approach using Nanopore-sequencing to help navigate this region. This allows for a subsequent more in-depth analysis based
Tamara Löwenstern, PhD Candidate, Medical University of Vienna, Austria
Stephen Rudd, Director, Bioinformatics Product, Oxford Nanopore Technologies
Stephen has been working with applied genome informatics for over 20 years and has experience in academia, the pharmaceutical industry and in bioinformatics support. He started his career with Oxford Nanopore seven years ago and worked as the central European sales manager before moving into Product Management. He currently looks after the EPI2ME product portfolio and hopes to bring bioinformatics enlightenment to non-bioinformaticians.
This talk highlights the results of sequencing 1,019 samples from the 1000 Genomes Project using ONT. Our analysis approach integrated linear and graph-based approaches for structural variant (SV) analysis using pan-genome graph augmentation. In total, we discovered 167,291 sequence-resolved SVs from different SV classes in the 1,019 samples, including deletions, duplications, insertions, and inversions. Our approach enabled a detailed characterization of mobile element insertions and complex inversions at single-nucleotide resolution and we could investigate potential SV formation and recurrence mechanisms that involve repeat sequences. Our open access dataset highlights the benefits of ONT long-read sequencing in characterizing polymorphic SVs at the population level.
This talk highlights the results of sequencing 1,019 samples from the 1000 Genomes Project using ONT. Our analysis approach integrated linear and graph-based approaches for structural variant (SV) analysis using pan-genome graph augmentation. In total, we discovered 167,291 sequence-resolved SVs from different SV classes in the 1,019 samples, including deletions, duplications, insertions, and inversions. Our approach enabled a detailed characterization of mobile element insertions and complex inversions at single-nucleotide resolution and we could investigate potential SV formation and recurrence mechanisms that involve repeat sequences. Our open access dataset highlights the benefits of ONT long-read sequencing in characterizing polymorphic SVs at the population level.
Tobias Rausch, Affiliation: European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL), Germany
Nanopore sequencing has multitudinous applications in the clinical context: Here, we shall focus on the use of nanopore sequencing during an outbreak of mpox and budding applications in the context of mRNA therapeutics and mRNA modifications. The first use case is tied to the more “classical” application of long read sequencing to resolve viral genomes and to span repetitive stretches are non accessible with short read sequencing. During the 2022 outbreak of monkeypox virus, we performed genomic sequencing of a local mpox sample on a PromethION and in parallel on an Illumina device. Both applications could recover most of the genome and SNPs. Only Nanopore sequencing could resolve two major structural variants in the genes OPG208 and OPG015. Reannotation supports both variants on the transcript level. In conclusion, nanopore sequencing could be used as a standalone sequencing technique and the technique could recover structure of monkeypox transcripts, that would otherwise have been missed. The second use case focuses on Direct RNA sequencing (dRNA-seq), to sequence native RNA. Such sequencing is helpful in the broader context of human diseases and mRNA therapeutics. Perhaps the most prominent example for the use of modifications in mRNA therapeutics is the incorporation of methylpseudouridine in mRNA vaccines to decrease immune response and increase yield. Additionally, there are budding applications in the context of translation-inducing readthrough drugs (TRIDs). This type of drug could be helpful in 10-20 % of clinical diseases, where a premature stop codon occurs. One possibility to facilitate read through is to apply pseudouridine directly to a stop codon. Recently, Schartel et al., have designed an organelle based targeting system for single pseudouridines. RNA004 dRNA-Seq was used in this context to evaluate site-specific pseudouridination. In the future this may also be used to verify disease-causing aberrations of methylation levels.
Nanopore sequencing has multitudinous applications in the clinical context: Here, we shall focus on the use of nanopore sequencing during an outbreak of mpox and budding applications in the context of mRNA therapeutics and mRNA modifications. The first use case is tied to the more “classical” application of long read sequencing to resolve viral genomes and to span repetitive stretches are non accessible with short read sequencing. During the 2022 outbreak of monkeypox virus, we performed genomic sequencing of a local mpox sample on a PromethION and in parallel on an Illumina device. Both applications could recover most of the genome and SNPs. Only Nanopore sequencing could resolve two major structural variants in the genes OPG208 and OPG015. Reannotation supports both variants on the transcript level. In conclusion, nanopore sequencing could be used as a standalone sequencing technique and the technique could recover structure of monkeypox transcripts, that would otherwise have been missed. The second use case focuses on Direct RNA sequencing (dRNA-seq), to sequence native RNA. Such sequencing is helpful in the broader context of human diseases and mRNA therapeutics. Perhaps the most prominent example for the use of modifications in mRNA therapeutics is the incorporation of methylpseudouridine in mRNA vaccines to decrease immune response and increase yield. Additionally, there are budding applications in the context of translation-inducing readthrough drugs (TRIDs). This type of drug could be helpful in 10-20 % of clinical diseases, where a premature stop codon occurs. One possibility to facilitate read through is to apply pseudouridine directly to a stop codon. Recently, Schartel et al., have designed an organelle based targeting system for single pseudouridines. RNA004 dRNA-Seq was used in this context to evaluate site-specific pseudouridination. In the future this may also be used to verify disease-causing aberrations of methylation levels.
Charlotte Hewel, University Medical Center Mainz, Germany
Joanne Trinh, Institute of Neurogenetics, University of Lübeck
Joanne Trinh, Ph.D., is a Heisenberg Professor. Dr. Trinh received her doctorate in medical genetics at the University of British Columbia. She subsequently joined the Institute of Neurogenetics in Lübeck, where she obtained a faculty position. She is now head of the “Integrative Omics in Parkinson’s disease” research group, which investigates the role of mosaic variants, nuclear and mitochondrial genome sequences and lifestyle and environmental factors in parkinsonism. She is on the Editorial Board of Annals of Neurology and Associate Editor of Frontiers in Neurology. Her research group in Lübeck will continue to use big-data approaches to elucidate the causes of neurological disease.
Per Hoffmann, Life & Brain GmbH, Germany
I have been involved in the field of genomics since 2005. Since then my work contributed to the identification of new genes and loci in a variety of diseases and traits, among them dyslexia, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, cleft lip/cleft palate, myeloma, and psoriasis. The focus of my current work is the application and adaption of genomic technologies for the investigation of the genetic basis of multifactorial diseases as well as their implementation in routine diagnostics. This includes microarrays, NGS as well as laboratory automation, process management and bioinformatics.
Parkinson's disease (PD) is the second most common neurodegenerative disorder and the fastest-growing neurological disorder, with over ten million affected persons worldwide. Thus far, no cure and only treatments to manage the symptoms are available. Genetic and environmental factors can cause PD. Out of all PD cases, approximately 15% are caused by a pathogenic variant in a single gene (i.e., monogenic PD) or a strong risk factor. Although PD pathogenesis has not yet been fully elucidated, mitochondrial dysfunction and impaired mitochondrial quality control are considered key players. We demonstrated the applicability of Nanopore long-read sequencing to detect mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variations. We have established and validated Nanopore sequencing workflows to assess mitochondrial DNA methylation and somatic variants of the mitochondrial genome (i.e., heteroplasmy). In the context of PD, we investigated mitochondrial genome heteroplasmy in samples derived from individuals with PRKN- and PINK1-related PD. We found that mitochondrial heteroplasmic variant load is associated with disease susceptibility, where a higher number of heteroplasmic variants is associated with a higher risk of PD (Z=2.93, p=0.0033). Currently, we are expanding our research to other forms of PD to assess the implications of mtDNA variants in PD and explore potential gene-environment interactions.
Parkinson's disease (PD) is the second most common neurodegenerative disorder and the fastest-growing neurological disorder, with over ten million affected persons worldwide. Thus far, no cure and only treatments to manage the symptoms are available. Genetic and environmental factors can cause PD. Out of all PD cases, approximately 15% are caused by a pathogenic variant in a single gene (i.e., monogenic PD) or a strong risk factor. Although PD pathogenesis has not yet been fully elucidated, mitochondrial dysfunction and impaired mitochondrial quality control are considered key players. We demonstrated the applicability of Nanopore long-read sequencing to detect mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variations. We have established and validated Nanopore sequencing workflows to assess mitochondrial DNA methylation and somatic variants of the mitochondrial genome (i.e., heteroplasmy). In the context of PD, we investigated mitochondrial genome heteroplasmy in samples derived from individuals with PRKN- and PINK1-related PD. We found that mitochondrial heteroplasmic variant load is associated with disease susceptibility, where a higher number of heteroplasmic variants is associated with a higher risk of PD (Z=2.93, p=0.0033). Currently, we are expanding our research to other forms of PD to assess the implications of mtDNA variants in PD and explore potential gene-environment interactions.
Theresa Lüth, Institute of Neurogenetics, University of Lübeck