2024 Advances in Genomic Technology Development Annual Meeting
Event Details
The Advances in Genomic Technology Development (AGTD) meeting was hosted by the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) Technology Development Coordinating Center (TDCC) at The Jackson Laboratory in Farmington, CT from June 10-13, 2024. The purpose of the meeting was to provide grantees of the NHGRI Genome Technology Program an open forum to share and discuss key opportunities and challenges for advanced genomic sequencing and synthesis technologies, and novel genomic approaches. Grantees showcased the latest developments in genomic technologies, fostering collaboration and innovation in the field.
The 2024 AGTD meeting also saw the addition of a hybrid open science day on June 10. The event, titled the “Genome Technology Forum” (GTF), aimed to provide insights into recent advancements in genomic technologies, focusing on improving the efficiency, accuracy, and complexity of genomic analyses. The GTF featured hands-on workshops in epigenomics and epitranscriptomics and lectures given by Genome Technology Program grantees. The lecture speakers discussed emerging technologies for understanding human genome functions and technologies for making and sequencing DNA and RNA.
Recordings of the lectures from the Genome Technology Forum can be found on the TDCC YouTube channel below.
Agendas:
- Genome Technology Forum: June 10
- Advances in Genomic Technology Development: June 11 | June 12 | June 13
All times Eastern.
Virtual and In-Person
Video Recordings
YouTube Playlist: Genome Technology Forum (2024)
June 10
9:30 AM – 12:00 PM: Small BusinessInnovation Research Experiential Learning (In-person only)
- TEM-seq: Ultrasensitive multi-omic platform using epitope-targeted DNA methylation mapping
EpiCypher, Inc.
- The accessible epitranscriptome: how anyone can include RNA modifications in their research
Alida Biosciences, Inc.
12:00 – 1:00 PM: Lunch and Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Expo
1:00 – 2:30 PM: Emerging Technologies for Understanding Human Genome Functions
- Chromatin Structure and Gene Regulation
Lacra Bintu, Stanford University
- Imaging 3D Genome
Siyuan (Steven) Wang, Yale University
- Towards a Comprehensive Functional Map of Human Protein-RNA Interactions
Brent Graveley, University of Connecticut
- Scalable investigation of gene functions in vivo
Xin Jin, Scripps Research
2:30 – 3:00 PM: Break and SBIR Expo
3:00 – 4:30 PM ET: Emerging Technologies for Making and Sequencing DNA and RNA
- Expanding studies of genomic diversity with complete, telomere-to-telomere (T2T) assemblies
Karen Miga, University of California, Santa Cruz
- Synthetic Biology
Jef Boeke, NYU Langone Medical
- Synthetic Genetic Systems. A New Frontier in Genomic Research
Steven Benner, Foundation for Applied Molecular Evolution
- Investigating epitranscriptomes by sequencing
Tao Pan, University of Chicago
4:30 – 4:45 PM: Break
4:45 – 5:30 PM: Keynote Address
Stacey Gabriel
Broad Institute
5:30 PM: Reception and SBIR Expo
June 11
9:00 AM: Welcome and Introduction
Mark Adams, Ph.D., The Jackson Laboratory
Stephanie Morris, Ph.D., National Human Genome Research Institute
Session 1 – Genome Technologies: Protein Interactions and DNA and RNA
9:15 AM: Photoactivable DNA binding molecules for Protein-DNA crosslinking
Lin Chen, Ph.D.
University of Southern California (Abstract #6)
9:30 AM: ChIP-DIP: A multiplexed method for mapping proteins to DNA uncovers combinatorics controlling gene expression
Andrew Perez
California Institute of Technology (Abstract #13)
9:45 AM: Decoding global RNP topologies in splicing regulation
Zhipeng Lu, Ph.D.,
University of Southern California (Abstract #19)
10:00 AM: SpliceRUSH: an exon-centric screening platform for proximal and distal splicing-regulatory elements in a native sequence context
Chaolin Zhang, Ph.D.
Columbia University (Abstract #35)
10:15 AM: INSCRIBE: High-sensitivity in situ capture of endogenous RNA-protein interactions in fixed cells and primary tissues
Gene Yeo, Ph.D., MBA
University of California, San Diego (Abstract #103)
10:30 AM: Break
11:00 AM: Keynote: New genomic methods to study nucleic acids and RNA-binding proteins
Chuan He, Ph.D.
The University of Chicago
12:00 PM: Lunch: Topic-based seating
1:00 PM: Innovative Molecular Analysis Technologies (IMAT)
Kelly Crotty Ph.D.
Director of IMAT, National Cancer Institute
Session 2 – Spatial 'Omics
1:15 PM: Slide-tags: Single-nucleus high-resolution multi-modal spatial genomics
Andrew J.C. Russell, Ph.D.
Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT (Abstract #4)
1:30 PM: DNA-optical barcoding technology for spatiotemporal single-cell analysis
Marissa Fahlberg, Ph.D.
LASE Innovation (Abstract #17)
1:45 PM: A multiplex in situ method to study the combinatorial code of epigenetic marks in single cells
Yanbo Chen
Yale University (Abstract #34)
2:00 PM: Development of multi-color 3D super-localization liveFISH and liveFISH PAINT to investigate the chromatin dynamics at any genomic scale
Yanyu Zhu, Ph.D.
Stanford University (Abstract #24)
2:15 PM: A single plasmid system for multiplexed CRISPR gene tagging in induced pluripotent stem cells
Oscar Perez-Leal, M.D.
Temple University (Abstract #22)
2:30 PM: Break
2:50 PM: Flash Talks - 2-minute poster previews from staff/trainee abstracts
Breakout Session - Refer to the pre-meeting survey to select your top 2
Single-Molecule Protein Seq | RNA systhesis/seq/modifications | Epigenetics/Chromatine structure |
Functional Genomics | DNA Synthesis | Multiomic Profiling |
Nanopore Sequencing | K99/R00 how-to | SBIR Grant Program |
4:30 PM: Poster Session 1: Abstracts 1-49
June 12
Session 3 – Single-Molecule Protein Sequencing
9:00 AM: Progress towards long-read single-molecule nanopore protein sequencing using unfoldase motors
Jeff Nivala, Ph.D.
University of Washington (Abstract #69)
9:15 AM: Engineered nanopores for single-molecule protein sequencing
Andrea Bonini, Ph.D.
University of Groningen (Abstract #67)
9:30 AM: Molecular determinants of current blockade produced by peptide transport through a nanopore
Jingqian Liu
University of Illinois Urbana Champaign (Abstract #79)
9:45 AM: Nanopore optimization for direct, single-molecule protein sequencing
Eric Peterson, Ph.D.
Electronic Biosciences, Inc. (Abstract #55)
10:00 AM: Chemical tools to uncover hidden proteome
Monika Raj, Ph.D.
Emory University (Abstract #72)
10:15 AM: Photo-fragmentation methods for single-molecule protein sequencing by nanopore mass spectrometry
Derek Stein, Ph.D.
Brown University (Abstract #77)
10:30 AM: Break
11:00 AM: Commercialization Panel Discussion
Moderators:
- Ian Nova, Ph.D., NHGRI
- Mostafa Analoui, Ph.D., Quinnipiac University
Panelists:
- Evan Macosko, M.D., Ph.D., representing Curio Biosciences
- Omar Abudayyeh, Ph.D., representing Tome Biosciences
- Sasha Levy, Ph.D., representing BacStitch DNA, Inc.
- Anna Marie Pyle, Ph.D., representing RNAConnect, Inc.
- Shenglong Zhang, Ph.D., representing DirectSeq Biosciences, Inc.
12:30 PM: Buffet Lunch
Session 4 – Synthetic Nucleic Acid Synthesis
1:30 PM: Towards High-throughput BIG DNA Writing
Antonio Vela Gartner
NYU Langone Health (Abstract #2)
1:45 PM: Scalable DNA engineering by mating bacteria in arrays and pools
Sasha Levy, Ph.D.
BacStitch DNA, Inc. (Abstract #18)
2:00 PM: Generating sequence variants by templated gene synthesis
Harris Wang, Ph.D.
Columbia University (Abstract #33)
2:15 PM: Progress towards a low-cost benchtop inkjet enzymatic DNA synthesizer
Damiano Verardo, Ph.D.
DNA Script (Abstract #62)
2:30 PM: Development of Genome-Build as a universal method to synthesize genomes
Christopher Warren, Ph.D.
Proteovista (Abstract #80)
2:45 PM: Flash Talks – 2-minute poster previews invited from staff/trainee abstracts
3:10 PM: Break
3:30 PM: Keynote: A Tale of 2 Strands: From Genomics to Origami, Vaccines, Data Storage and Back
Mark Bathe, Ph.D.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
4:30 PM: Poster Session 2: Abstracts 50-98
June 13
Session 5 – Sequencing Technology Development
9:00 AM: High accuracy nanopore sequencing
Andrew Laszlo, Ph.D.
University of Washington (Abstract #60)
9:15 AM: Navigating the pitfalls of long-read based DNA modification detection
Gang Fang, Ph.D.
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai (Abstract #10)
9:30 AM: Complete genomes of a multi-generational pedigree to expand studies of genetic and epigenetic inheritance
Karen Miga, Ph.D.
University of California, Santa Cruz (Abstract #68)
9:45 AM: Measuring the epigenome with nanopore sequencing
Winston Timp, Ph.D.
Johns Hopkins University (Abstract #78)
10:00 AM: Psi modification profiling and dynamics in the human transcriptome
Sara Rouhanifard Ph.D.
Northeastern University (Abstract #73)
10:15 AM: Break
Session 6 – 2024 Opportunity Fund Previews
10:30 AM: Transfer RNA epitranscriptome by multi-target sequencing and top-down mass spectrometry
Shenglong Zhang, Ph.D., New York Institute of Technology
Tao Pan, Ph.D., University of Chicago
High-throughput interrogation of transcription factor binding within the mammalian brain
Bing Ren, Ph.D., University of California, San Diego
Alejandro Chavez, Ph.D., University of California, San Diego
Transliteration of a 8 base alphabet into 4 bases in eukaryotic cells
Steven Benner, Ph.D., Foundation for Applied Molecular Evolution
Jef Boeke, Ph.D., NYU Langone Health
Imaging-free spatial transcriptomics
Fei Chen, Ph.D., Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT
Evan Macosko, M.D., Ph.D., Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT
11:00 AM: Keynote: New machine learning models for single-cell and regulatory genomics
Christina Leslie, Ph.D.
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
12:00 AM: Buffet Lunch
Session 7 – Single-Cell Genomics and Chromatin Structure
1:00 PM: A novel flexible approach for high-throughput single-cell phenotyping and genotyping
Magali Soumillon Ph.D.
Flexomics (Abstract #29)
1:15 PM: Single-cell massively parallel reporter gene assays (scMPRA)
Barak Cohen, Ph.D.
Washington University in St. Louis (Abstract #7)
1:30 PM: Massively parallel in vivo Perturb-seq reveals cell type-specific transcriptional networks in cortical development
Xin Jin, Ph.D.
Scripps Research (Abstract #64)
1:45 PM: High-throughput measurements of gene expression and chromatin state changes upon targeted gene activation
Lacra Bintu, Ph.D.
Stanford University (Abstract #1)
2:00 pm TEM-seq: An ultrasensitive, multi-omic method that directly links chromatin features to DNA methylation
Bryan Venters, Ph.D.
EpiCypher, Inc. (Abstract #14)
2:15 PM: Genomic sequence context and histone marks regulate pioneer binding to nucleosomes
Martha Bulyk, Ph.D.
Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School (Abstract #3)
2:30 PM: Break
Session 8 – Wrap-up and Future Directions
2:50 PM: Breakout session wrap-up and TDCC Future Directions
Mark Adams, Ph.D., The Jackson Laboratory
Stephanie Morris, Ph.D., NHGRI
3:50 PM: Adjourn
Last updated: August 2, 2024