Understanding chromatin biology using high-throughput sequencing workshop
Note: Some HBC workshops are taught in person and others online via Zoom.
ONLINE Workshop dates and times:
Friday, May 2, 2025: 9:30AM-12PM
Tuesday, May 6, 2025: 9:30AM-12PM
Friday, May 9, 2025: 9:30AM-12PM
Instruction will be mostly learner-centric, requiring a time commitment between the workshop sessions!
Note: Workshop dates and times are subject to change
Description:
This 3-day hands-on workshop will begin with a basic introduction of concepts related to gene regulation followed by a description of three common approaches used to interrogate chromatin biology: ChIP-seq, CUT&RUN and ATAC-seq. This workshop will provide participants with:
- Important considerations for setting up a successful ChIP-seq/CUT&RUN/ATAC-seq experiment
- A description the detailed workflow for analyzing ChIP-seq data.
- Instruction on how to efficiently manage and analyze high throughput sequencing data starting from sequence reads through to peak calling, using tools and software available on the HMS-RC’s high performance compute cluster.
NOTE: For each step of the workflow there will be additional information describing how parameters might change for CUT&RUN-seq and ATAC-seq.
Prerequisites:
This is one of our advanced workshops, and requires registants to have attended the following Basic workshop offered by our training team in the last 6-8 months: (or have a working knowledg of Shell and HPC)
- Shell for Bioinformatics (formerly called Introduction to command-line interface workshop)
There is an expectation of participants to be confortable with some/all of the following:
- Experience using a High-Performance Computing (HPC) cluster environment (e.g. O2 at HMS)
- Navigating filesystems (changing directories, listing contents, full/relative paths, wildcards)
- Creating, moving, copying, and removing files/directories
- Searching files and redirection
- Creating ‘for loops’ and small scripts
- Creating long, advanced script
I am experienced using Shell/HPC but have not attended the HBC prerequisite workshop, can I still register?
Yes, please register and provide your Shell/HPC exerience on the form, and we’ll get back to you.
Who should attend?
Eligible* Harvard researchers who want to learn:
- How to design a good ChIP-seq/CUT&RUN/ATAC-seq experiment
- The analysis workflow starting with raw sequencing data (Illumina) through to identifying significantly enriched regions (“calling peaks”)
- How to handle various file formats encountered with ChIP-seq (and related) analysis, using command-line tools such as bedtools and deepTools
Cost:
There is a non-refundable and non-transferable $65 registration fee for this advanced workshop*.
We will be accepting 25 participants on a first-come, first-served basis:
- If you are one of the first 25 eligible* registrants, you will receive an email within 1 week with a link to pay the (non-refundable & non-transferable) $65 registration fee.
- If you are not among the first 25 eligible* registrants, you will be added to the waitlist and notified when we open registration for the next iteration of this workshop.
NOTE: You will not have a reserved seat for this workshop until you pay the registration fee. Please make sure you pay within the time stated in that email, else you will lose your spot to someone on the waitlist.
*NOTE: HMS Graduate Students may receive waivers on registration fees. Please register and we’ll followup with you.
Registration:
Please make sure you take the following into account when signing up for the workshop:
- Mandatory attendance for all three classes.
- 2-3 hours of reading and exercises from selected lessons before each workshop sessions.
- Active participation during discussion sessions.
Eligibility requirements:
*To be eligible to attend this workshop you should fulfill at least one of the following criteria:
- Harvard Medical School researcher in a lab on the Quad, with grants administered by HMS Gordon Hall
- Harvard School of Dental Medicine researcher, with grants administered by HMS Gordon Hall
- Graduate student at the Harvard Medical School
- Researcher affiliated with the Dana-Farber / Harvard Cancer Center (DF/HCC)
- Researcher at a Harvard-affiliated institution participating in HIV related research (CFAR).
If you are unsure of your eligibility, please register anyway and we will get back to you.
NOTE: We do not record our training sessions.
Questions?
Please email us at hbctraining@hsph.harvard.edu with any questions.