Some of this material copied from this original source
Kevin outlined the content of the course. The course webpage for Spring 2010 can be found here.
Students will be graded according to their contributions to this wiki.
Everyone with an SOE user account is able edit the wiki. Weblinks to the terms of agreement that has to be signed before an account is created can be found on the course webpage.
The very first assignment for all students is to create a scaffold for each section of the wiki. The sections were assigned on a voluntary basis.
Kevin emphasised the importance of avoiding plagiarism. All content that is someone else's idea/product has to cited properly and credit has to be given to the original author. Sentences have to be quoted if they differ only in a few words, pictures taken from other people's webpages have to be licensed under creative commons and the source must be added immediately. Intellectual property without proper credit on the wiki is not acceptable.
Team work is allowed, but students should keep in mind that their grade depends on their contribution to the wiki and should take turns in writing (meaning logging in with their SOE account) when working in teams.
Studying Ariolimax Dolichophallus, otherwise known as Banana Slug. Scientific name stems from Latin for “Long Penis”
This class is not a competitive course– all written work will be done in the wiki. No private papers will be turned in. All work done will be done on the campus-rocks and should be accessible to all members of the course.
Three parts to this class
Reading List
Some work has already been done on assembling small genomes at UCSC.
Homework
Will need to utilize both UCSC and SOE accounts.
All data should be documented on the data available page[insert link].
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All information about lab protocols used to create the sequencing should be gathered and documented in the wiki.
Information of the original slug.
DNA extraction techniques.
Sample Library preparation.
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The cluster is barebones and has no existing bioinformatics tools.
Main page should list all existing programs available on the web for genome assembly.
Individual pages will document the local installation.
Small test organisms
Banana Slug biology
Guest speaker (or two) will give organism information of the Banana slug.
Web Literature searches on the Banana Slug should be done.
Information about other types of banana slugs may be helpful. There is data on another species found in regions north of UCSC.
Summaries and references of the papers should be put in the wiki.
Banana Slugs in popular culture
Genome Browser
If a quality assembly can be produced, a genome browser will be created.
Following years may shift their focus onto annotations.
Style Guide
Lecture Notes
Volunteers for filling out wiki pages
Computer Resources - Thomas
Data Available - [Shyamini]
Lab Protocols - John Kim
Sequencing Technology - Jenny Draper
Bioinformatic Tools - ?
Banana slug biology - ?
Banana slugs in popular culture - No one
other mollusc genomes - ?
style guide - Chris
Lecture Notes - John and Thomas
Contributors - Jeff
Academic Integrity
DO NOT add any information unless the source is known– Sources should be added at the same time as information.
Direct copying is not allowed.
Direct quotations is allowed but should be limited.
Additional Information
SOE accounts will be used to access this wiki.
Permission codes are available from Kevin Karplus.
There is no required programming language. Python is recommended for rapid prototyping. C or C++ is recommended for large datasets.
parallel processing is done using sunGrid
All data must be off the cluster 2-3 weeks after the course.