WYMM Tour: Toronto
Wednesday, October 16, 2024, 09:00 am-05:00 pm EST - Toronto, Canada
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 Wednesday, October 16, 2024, at the MaRS Discovery District 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
09:00 am-05:00 pm EST | Agenda (subject to change) | Speaker |
|---|---|---|
09:00 am-09:30 am | Registration/Breakfast | |
09:30 am-09:35 am | Welcome | Mark Leno, Oxford Nanopore Technologies |
09:35 am-10:00 am | Nanopore updates: The latest and greatest | Roger Bialy, Oxford Nanopore Technologies |
10:00 am-10:30 am | Expanding direct RNA-sequencing capabilities for use in multi-omics approaches | Athanasios Zovoilis, University of Manitoba |
10:30 am-11:00 am | Networking Break | |
11:00 am-11:30 am | Considerations for Oxford Nanopore sequencing as a diagnostic tool in a clinical microbiology laboratory | Aaron Campigotto, Hospital for Sick Children |
11:30 am-11:40 am | LIGHTNING TALK: Detecting chromosomal copy number variations and point mutations in Glioma using a single assay | Mashiat Mimosa, University of Toronto |
11:40 am-11:50 am | LIGHTNING TALK: Characterization of tandem repeats and methylation using a graph-based method | Mahreen Khan, Hospital for Sick Children |
11:50 am-12:00 pm | LIGHTNING TALK: Nanopore long-read sequencing at single-cell resolution in HER2-breast cancer | Tom Ouellette, Ontario Institute for Cancer Research |
12:00 pm-01:00 pm | Lunch | |
01:00 pm-01:30 pm | Exploring Nanopore technology for cell free CSF DNA analyses of rare childhood brain tumors | Annie Huang, Hospital for Sick Children |
01:30 pm-02:00 pm | Nanopore sequencing enables biodiversity studies at scale | Robin Floyd, University of Guelph |
02:00 pm-02:15 pm | Networking Break | |
02:15 pm-02:45 pm | Oxford Nanopore: Bioinformatics updates | Sissel Juul, Oxford Nanopore Technologies |
02:45 pm-03:15 pm | Characterizing human cancers and their epigenomes using nanopore long read sequencing | Steven Jones, Genome Sciences Centre, BC Cancer |
03:15 pm-03:30 pm | Closing | Mark Leno, Oxford Nanopore Technologies |
03:30 pm-05:00 pm | Networking |
Speakers
Mark Leno, Region Sales Director, Oxford Nanopore Technologies
Roger Bialy, Regional Sequencing Specialist, Oxford Nanopore TechnologiesOxford Nanopore Technologies’ pore-based sequencing technology enables the direct sequencing of DNA and RNA molecules and as such it allows for the first time, the simultaneous study of genomes with epigenomes and transcriptomes with epitranscriptomes expanding multi-omics approaches. In this talk I will present a sequencing approach which enables the detection of multiple classes of non-coding RNAs excluded by the current standard approach, alongside natively polyadenylated transcripts. I will show how this approach substantially expands the simultaneous representation of multiple classes of non-coding RNAs, without the need for targeted sequencing, presenting a more comprehensive direct RNA-seq approach for the simultaneous study of epitranscriptomes and transcriptomes.
Oxford Nanopore Technologies’ pore-based sequencing technology enables the direct sequencing of DNA and RNA molecules and as such it allows for the first time, the simultaneous study of genomes with epigenomes and transcriptomes with epitranscriptomes expanding multi-omics approaches. In this talk I will present a sequencing approach which enables the detection of multiple classes of non-coding RNAs excluded by the current standard approach, alongside natively polyadenylated transcripts. I will show how this approach substantially expands the simultaneous representation of multiple classes of non-coding RNAs, without the need for targeted sequencing, presenting a more comprehensive direct RNA-seq approach for the simultaneous study of epitranscriptomes and transcriptomes.
Athanasios Zovoilis, University of ManitobaWithin clinical microbiology labs, nanopore sequencing has the potential to be utilized in multiple ways. One important manner in which nanopore sequencing (Oxford Nanopore Technologies) can be used is as a tool for diagnosis of microorganisms from clinical specimens. Implementation of nanopore sequencing within a clinical lab requires appropriate validations and evaluations compared to current diagnostic methods and an ongoing process to ensure high-quality testing and reporting occurs. Some of the uses for nanopore sequencing, and the evaluation processes required for implementation in a clinical lab, are described.
Within clinical microbiology labs, nanopore sequencing has the potential to be utilized in multiple ways. One important manner in which nanopore sequencing (Oxford Nanopore Technologies) can be used is as a tool for diagnosis of microorganisms from clinical specimens. Implementation of nanopore sequencing within a clinical lab requires appropriate validations and evaluations compared to current diagnostic methods and an ongoing process to ensure high-quality testing and reporting occurs. Some of the uses for nanopore sequencing, and the evaluation processes required for implementation in a clinical lab, are described.
Aaron Campigotto, Hospital for Sick ChildrenWe aimed to develop a single streamlined assay to diagnose Glioma, the most common type of malignant brain tumour. It is diagnosed using biomarkers including chromosomal copy number variations (CNVs) and single nucleotide variations (SNVs). CNVs and SNVs are traditionally tested using different large platforms in large genomic facilities creating delays in testing and increasing cost. While nanopore whole genome sequencing can detect CNVs, it does not allow for enough coverage to accurately detect SNVs. Moreover, raw formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) DNA is not compatible with this technology. To fix both challenges we used a PCR based approach that allows enrichment of the SNV targets while creating new nanopore compatible DNA copies. To counteract the bias that PCR creates with uneven amplification, we used a SNP based method to call the CNVs. All the amplicons for CNVs and SNVs were pooled together in one assay and tested on a small cohort of Glioma samples. Expected CNVs such as losses in chr 1p, 19q and 10 were detected with a loss of heterozygosity pattern. The gain in chr 7 was detected with a 2:1 allele frequency pattern. The SNVs were also concordant with reference results. Finally, the SNV and CNV calling analysis were streamlined using custom shell script, further reducing total turnaround time (including sequencing and data analysis) to less than a day for the entire batch of samples. Initial cost analysis shows <50% of the traditional testing costs for the assay. This work is the first to develop a streamlined single test to detect Glioma CNVs and SNVs using FFPE DNA with nanopore sequencing. The shorter testing time, streamlined workflow, and low assay/capital cost could positively influence the care of brain cancer patients.
We aimed to develop a single streamlined assay to diagnose Glioma, the most common type of malignant brain tumour. It is diagnosed using biomarkers including chromosomal copy number variations (CNVs) and single nucleotide variations (SNVs). CNVs and SNVs are traditionally tested using different large platforms in large genomic facilities creating delays in testing and increasing cost. While nanopore whole genome sequencing can detect CNVs, it does not allow for enough coverage to accurately detect SNVs. Moreover, raw formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) DNA is not compatible with this technology. To fix both challenges we used a PCR based approach that allows enrichment of the SNV targets while creating new nanopore compatible DNA copies. To counteract the bias that PCR creates with uneven amplification, we used a SNP based method to call the CNVs. All the amplicons for CNVs and SNVs were pooled together in one assay and tested on a small cohort of Glioma samples. Expected CNVs such as losses in chr 1p, 19q and 10 were detected with a loss of heterozygosity pattern. The gain in chr 7 was detected with a 2:1 allele frequency pattern. The SNVs were also concordant with reference results. Finally, the SNV and CNV calling analysis were streamlined using custom shell script, further reducing total turnaround time (including sequencing and data analysis) to less than a day for the entire batch of samples. Initial cost analysis shows <50% of the traditional testing costs for the assay. This work is the first to develop a streamlined single test to detect Glioma CNVs and SNVs using FFPE DNA with nanopore sequencing. The shorter testing time, streamlined workflow, and low assay/capital cost could positively influence the care of brain cancer patients.
Mashiat Mimosa, PhD Candidate, Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology, University of TorontoAbstract: Over 7% of the human genome is comprised of tandem repeats (TRs) – stretches of DNA sequence repeated adjacent to one another. Tandem repeat expansions (TREs) beyond a pathogenic length are associated with over 60 neurological, neurodevelopmental, and neuromuscular disorders. Larger TREs lead to earlier onset, increased severity, and faster progression of disease. GC-rich TREs can become hypermethylated, a mechanism that is associated with disease pathogenesis. Additionally, interruptions in repeat sequences reduce disease severity and result in later age of disease onset. Repeat size is difficult to characterize using existing molecular assays and short-read sequencing. These methods also do not provide methylation information, and only output limited repeat purity information. Nanopore sequencing overcomes these limitations by providing base-pair sequence resolution and methylation information. We have developed a novel tool to estimate tandem repeat size, methylation (adjacent to, and within the repeat) and sequence composition. Here, we demonstrate methods for tandem repeat characterization using targeted Cas9 sequencing, adaptive sampling, and whole-genome sequencing (WGS) approaches. We have also benchmarked our tool against other existing repeat-sizing tools. The estimated TRE size from our tool is strongly correlated with the known size at pathogenic loci in repeat-disease patient samples (R=0.93, p = 2x10-2), and is up to 95.5% accurate at low read depth (5x reads). Characterizing genome-wide TR sizes from Nanopore WGS reveals a strong correlation between our tool and short-read WGS genotypes (R = 0.93, p = 2x10-7). Our work highlights the benefit of Nanopore sequencing for the characterization of TREs. We suggest optimized parameters for analyzing TREs with Nanopore sequencing, and demonstrate the utility of our approach in sizing large, complex TREs. This method can ultimately result in faster characterization of TREs, more accurate prognosis, and faster clinical diagnosis of tandem-repeat associated diseases.
Abstract: Over 7% of the human genome is comprised of tandem repeats (TRs) – stretches of DNA sequence repeated adjacent to one another. Tandem repeat expansions (TREs) beyond a pathogenic length are associated with over 60 neurological, neurodevelopmental, and neuromuscular disorders. Larger TREs lead to earlier onset, increased severity, and faster progression of disease. GC-rich TREs can become hypermethylated, a mechanism that is associated with disease pathogenesis. Additionally, interruptions in repeat sequences reduce disease severity and result in later age of disease onset. Repeat size is difficult to characterize using existing molecular assays and short-read sequencing. These methods also do not provide methylation information, and only output limited repeat purity information. Nanopore sequencing overcomes these limitations by providing base-pair sequence resolution and methylation information. We have developed a novel tool to estimate tandem repeat size, methylation (adjacent to, and within the repeat) and sequence composition. Here, we demonstrate methods for tandem repeat characterization using targeted Cas9 sequencing, adaptive sampling, and whole-genome sequencing (WGS) approaches. We have also benchmarked our tool against other existing repeat-sizing tools. The estimated TRE size from our tool is strongly correlated with the known size at pathogenic loci in repeat-disease patient samples (R=0.93, p = 2x10-2), and is up to 95.5% accurate at low read depth (5x reads). Characterizing genome-wide TR sizes from Nanopore WGS reveals a strong correlation between our tool and short-read WGS genotypes (R = 0.93, p = 2x10-7). Our work highlights the benefit of Nanopore sequencing for the characterization of TREs. We suggest optimized parameters for analyzing TREs with Nanopore sequencing, and demonstrate the utility of our approach in sizing large, complex TREs. This method can ultimately result in faster characterization of TREs, more accurate prognosis, and faster clinical diagnosis of tandem-repeat associated diseases.
Mahreen Khan, PhD Candidate, The Hospital for Sick Children, CanadaThe development of high-throughput single-cell sequencing has enabled the high-resolution mapping of cellular states and hierarchies across diverse sets of tissue. Nevertheless, while certain studies have targeted breast tissue, most existing single-cell studies have not been designed for addressing the question of what cellular constituents and associated molecular alterations are driving the normal-to-malignant transformation. The primary issue with existing work is that they either (a) only target immune subpopulations, (b) do not generate pairs of tumour and matched normal biopsies from the same patient, and/or (c) use sequencing technologies that exhibit technical biases (e.g. 3’ bias) that often limit analyses to only gene expression and not integrative analysis that spans gene expression, mutation, and isoform calling from the same cell and tissue. To address these limitations, we leverage the new, higher accuracy Nanopore chemistry to perform joint genomic and transcriptomic single-cell profiling of matched tumour and normal samples from HER2-negative breast cancer patients. This lightning talk will briefly overview the generally straightforward workflow for performing long-read sequencing at single-cell resolution.
The development of high-throughput single-cell sequencing has enabled the high-resolution mapping of cellular states and hierarchies across diverse sets of tissue. Nevertheless, while certain studies have targeted breast tissue, most existing single-cell studies have not been designed for addressing the question of what cellular constituents and associated molecular alterations are driving the normal-to-malignant transformation. The primary issue with existing work is that they either (a) only target immune subpopulations, (b) do not generate pairs of tumour and matched normal biopsies from the same patient, and/or (c) use sequencing technologies that exhibit technical biases (e.g. 3’ bias) that often limit analyses to only gene expression and not integrative analysis that spans gene expression, mutation, and isoform calling from the same cell and tissue. To address these limitations, we leverage the new, higher accuracy Nanopore chemistry to perform joint genomic and transcriptomic single-cell profiling of matched tumour and normal samples from HER2-negative breast cancer patients. This lightning talk will briefly overview the generally straightforward workflow for performing long-read sequencing at single-cell resolution.
Tom Ouellette, PhD Student, Ontario Institute for Cancer Research
Annie Huang, Hospital for Sick ChildrenThe Centre for Biodiversity Genomics (CBG) at the University of Guelph leads a large international research program that is cataloguing planetary biodiversity by generating short, standardized DNA sequences (DNA barcoding). This talk will describe two main areas in which Nanopore sequencing is being applied to this mission. (1) We have developed simplified protocols to allow a high level of multiplexing on a single flow cell, and user-friendly software tools tailored to analyze the resultant data. Importantly, these protocols are broadly scalable, enabling the recovery of sequences from thousands of specimens in a run (Flongle) to up to 100,000 specimens (MinION) as could be applied in large core facilities. This dramatically reduces the cost of analysis per specimen for routine sequencing. We envision a distributed network of small labs in low-and-middle-income countries, utilizing Nanopore sequencers with our PCR reagents and protocols to survey local biodiversity. (2) Metabarcoding, i.e., sequencing a pool of DNA from a bulk sample as opposed to individual specimens, has the potential to greatly accelerate biodiversity surveys, but due to the high read-depth and sequence fidelity required has until recently only been possible on short-read NGS platforms such as Illumina, thus generating only partial barcode sequences. Current Nanopore chemistry and analytical protocols now yield sufficient read depth and sequencing fidelity, without limitation on read length, to allow metabarcoding of the standard-length COI marker, enabling the data generated by metabarcoding surveys to be directly compared with the full reference library of known taxa.
The Centre for Biodiversity Genomics (CBG) at the University of Guelph leads a large international research program that is cataloguing planetary biodiversity by generating short, standardized DNA sequences (DNA barcoding). This talk will describe two main areas in which Nanopore sequencing is being applied to this mission. (1) We have developed simplified protocols to allow a high level of multiplexing on a single flow cell, and user-friendly software tools tailored to analyze the resultant data. Importantly, these protocols are broadly scalable, enabling the recovery of sequences from thousands of specimens in a run (Flongle) to up to 100,000 specimens (MinION) as could be applied in large core facilities. This dramatically reduces the cost of analysis per specimen for routine sequencing. We envision a distributed network of small labs in low-and-middle-income countries, utilizing Nanopore sequencers with our PCR reagents and protocols to survey local biodiversity. (2) Metabarcoding, i.e., sequencing a pool of DNA from a bulk sample as opposed to individual specimens, has the potential to greatly accelerate biodiversity surveys, but due to the high read-depth and sequence fidelity required has until recently only been possible on short-read NGS platforms such as Illumina, thus generating only partial barcode sequences. Current Nanopore chemistry and analytical protocols now yield sufficient read depth and sequencing fidelity, without limitation on read length, to allow metabarcoding of the standard-length COI marker, enabling the data generated by metabarcoding surveys to be directly compared with the full reference library of known taxa.
Robin Floyd, University of Guelph
Sissel Juul, VP, Applications, Oxford Nanopore TechnologiesSissel joined Oxford Nanopore 10 years ago and leads the multidisciplinary Applications teams globally.
These teams aim to demonstrate and extend the utility of Oxford Nanopore’s devices by applying the technology's unique strengths to a broad range of high-impact biological and clinical contexts. In addition to developing and showcasing novel applications and benchmarking the technology, Sissel’s teams work directly with customers to support them and ensure their success.
The Genome Sciences Centre has a long-standing interest in how complete genomic sequencing alongside transcriptomic analysis of human cancers can be done in a clinically meaningful timeline. Therefore providing a precision medicine platform that can be used to influence therapeutic choice. Our personalized oncogenomics program has so far profiled over one thousand tumours from late-stage patients. Nanopore technologies long-read sequencing has the potential to improve both the speed and accuracy of genetic characterization of human cancers. The longer reads providing the ability to more accurately discover and define large scale structural variation. In addition, the alignment of the longer reads provide a more accurate assessment of regions that are highly repetitive or duplicated. Long read sequencing also provides the ability to determine the epigenetic status and therefore the activation of the underlying genes. The longer reads also provide an ability to phase and haplotype variants allowing a more precise characterization of the somatic variants. Likewise, epigenomic patterns can also be haplotyped allowing a more sophisticated view of promoter activity. Correlating methylation patterns associated with imprinted regions has also provided an opportunity to improve hereditary cancer testing through the rapid paternal assignment of pathogenic alleles.
The Genome Sciences Centre has a long-standing interest in how complete genomic sequencing alongside transcriptomic analysis of human cancers can be done in a clinically meaningful timeline. Therefore providing a precision medicine platform that can be used to influence therapeutic choice. Our personalized oncogenomics program has so far profiled over one thousand tumours from late-stage patients. Nanopore technologies long-read sequencing has the potential to improve both the speed and accuracy of genetic characterization of human cancers. The longer reads providing the ability to more accurately discover and define large scale structural variation. In addition, the alignment of the longer reads provide a more accurate assessment of regions that are highly repetitive or duplicated. Long read sequencing also provides the ability to determine the epigenetic status and therefore the activation of the underlying genes. The longer reads also provide an ability to phase and haplotype variants allowing a more precise characterization of the somatic variants. Likewise, epigenomic patterns can also be haplotyped allowing a more sophisticated view of promoter activity. Correlating methylation patterns associated with imprinted regions has also provided an opportunity to improve hereditary cancer testing through the rapid paternal assignment of pathogenic alleles.
Steve Jones, Co-Director, BC Cancer, Canada
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