| Literature DB >> 31145692 |
Boas Pucker1, Hanna Marie Schilbert1, Sina Franziska Schumacher2.
Abstract
Combined awareness about the power and limitations of bioinformatics and molecular biology enables advanced research based on high-throughput data. Despite an increasing demand of scientists with a combined background in both fields, the education of dry and wet lab subjects are often still separated. This work describes an example of integrated education with a focus on genomics and transcriptomics. Participants learned computational and molecular biology methods in the same practical course. Peer-review was applied as a teaching method to foster cooperative learning of students with heterogeneous backgrounds. The positive evaluation results indicate that this approach was accepted by the participants and would likely be suitable for wider scale application.Entities:
Keywords: NGS; RNA-Seq; bioinformatics; genome assembly; genome research; molecular biology; sequencing technologies; teaching; transcriptome assembly; variant calling
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31145692 PMCID: PMC6798849 DOI: 10.1515/jib-2019-0005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Integr Bioinform ISSN: 1613-4516
Figure 1:Course content focus.
The complementing design of two courses integrates bioinformatics and molecular biology education. The proportion of bioinformatics content (yellow) and molecular biology content (green) is illustrated for the courses “Applied Genome Research” (A), “Molecular Methods in Genome Research” (B), and for the combination of both courses (C).
Figure 2:Applied Genome Research course content overview.
The content of this course is distributed over two weeks: one genomic (A) and one transcriptomic (B) week. The inner circle contains topics, the middle circle contains methods and tools, and the outer circle contains materials and file formats. Abbreviations in these figures (excluding tool and file format names): plasmid DNA (pDNA), bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC), genomic DNA (gDNA), Sequence Read Archive (SRA).
Figure 3:Molecular Methods in Genome Research course content overview.
Course content overview displays the interleaved use of bioinformatics and molecular biology.