Kimberley Billingsley from the National Institutes of Health in the USA spoke at London Calling 2025 on “Decoding the genomics of neurodegenerative diseases with large-scale, long-read sequencing.” This session was an update from the CARD Applied Neurogenomics group. Billingsley divided the session into three topics: long-read sequencing, methylation, and RNA sequencing. Billingsley emphasized that current […]
Yasuhiro Murakawa from Kyoto University in Japan presented at London Calling 2025 on “A compendium of human RNA structures and modifications.” Kazuhiro Takeuchi from the Murakawa lab generated a de novo human transcriptome assembly using “full-length” cDNA sequencing. Murakawa noted that there are many RNA forms and regulation events. Long-read sequencing methods, while useful in […]
Nathalie Kingston and Kathy Stirrups from the NIHR BioResource in the UK presented at London Calling 2025 on “Using long-read sequencing for translational health research.” The NIHR BioResource has ~300,000 participants and a recallable resource. Samples can be identified by phenotype and genotype. The BioResource has panels of participants from several diseases and groups. Stirrups […]
Salvatore Benfatto from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute presented at London Calling 2025 on “Rapid epigenomic classification of acute leukemia.” Benfatto started with a clinical case of a sixty-one year old female patient with intermittent fevers, fatigue, and leukocytosis. Multiple tests had to be run in parallel, including flow cytometry, karyotyping, immunohistochemistry… The process is time […]
Dr. Anna Smielewska, a consultant virologist in the UK, spoke at ESCMID Global about 16S rRNA sequencing in healthcare settings. The title of the session was “Implementing portable, real-time 16S rRNA sequencing in the healthcare sector enhances antimicrobial stewardship.” Smielewska works with the Liverpool University Hospitals, several hospitals with a broad range of cases. The […]
Kim Musser, Clinical Director, Wadsworth Center, David Axelrod Institute, presented at ESCMID Global on the use of nanopore sequencing in public health investigations. The title of the session was “Implementing next generation sequencing for rapid diagnostics and public health investigations.” Musser spoke about using nanopore sequencing for antimicrobial sequencing for antibiotic resistant bacteria to characterize […]
Tonight I returned from my first SABER East! It was a lot of fun! The video I watched tonight was Judith Brueur from the Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH) discuss the implementation of a respiratory metagenomics protocol at Guy’s and St. Thomas’ Hospital (GSTT) using Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT). The protocol was developed by the […]
Dr. Gabriel E. Wagner from the Medical University of Graz presented on “Reliable whole-genome genotyping for bacterial surveillance using nanopore sequencing data” as part of the Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT) YouTube series. Wagner spoke about the importance of genomic surveillance for both known pathogens and surveillance of variants, including antimicrobial and vaccine resistance. This topic, […]
Tonight I watched Gabriel Griffin, Assistant Professor, Dana-Faber Cancer Institute present an Oxford Nanopore Technology session titled “Rapid epigenomic classification of acute leukemia with long-read sequencing.” Griffin spoke about leukemia diagnosis requiring multiple steps and time: morphology, flow cytometry, immuno histochemistry stains, targeted sequencing, and cytogenetics. This can take up to fourteen days. Griffin and […]
Debarshi Mustafi from the University of Washington spoke about using long-read approaches to learn about genomic and epigenomic basis of cancer. The session was part of an Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT) YouTube video I watched tonight. Mustafi said that “there can be a lot embedded in the genetic material that we are understanding over time.” […]