e-learning
Avian influenza viral strain analysis from gene segment sequencing data
Abstract
Of the four species of influenza viruses (Influenza A-D), Influenza A is the most virulent in human hosts and subtypes of it have been responsible for all historic flu pandemics.
About This Material
This is a Hands-on Tutorial from the GTN which is usable either for individual self-study, or as a teaching material in a classroom.
Questions this will address
- With reassortment of gene segments being a common event in avian influenza virus (AIV) evolution, does it make sense to use a reference-based mapping approach for constructing consensus genome sequences for AIV samples?
- Is it possible to reuse existing tools and workflows developed for the analysis of sequencing data from other viruses?
- How can we obtain meaningful phylogenetic insight from AIV consensus sequences?
Learning Objectives
- Determine how reassortment impacts reference-based mapping approaches
- Use a collection of per-segment reference sequences to construct a hybrid reference genome that is sufficiently close to a sequenced sample to be useful as a reference for mapping
- Construct a sample consensus genome from mapped reads
- Generate per-segment phylogenetic trees of AIV consensus sequences
Licence: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Keywords: Variant Analysis, one-health, virology
Target audience: Students
Resource type: e-learning
Version: 10
Status: Active
Prerequisites:
- Introduction to Galaxy Analyses
- Mapping
- Quality Control
Learning objectives:
- Determine how reassortment impacts reference-based mapping approaches
- Use a collection of per-segment reference sequences to construct a hybrid reference genome that is sufficiently close to a sequenced sample to be useful as a reference for mapping
- Construct a sample consensus genome from mapped reads
- Generate per-segment phylogenetic trees of AIV consensus sequences
Date modified: 2024-10-04
Date published: 2022-11-21
Scientific topics: Genetic variation
Activity log