Plant Bioinformatics

University of Toronto
via Coursera
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The past 15 years have been exciting ones in plant biology. Hundreds of plant genomes have been sequenced, RNA-seq has enabled transcriptome-wide expression profiling, and a proliferation of “-seq”-based methods has permitted protein-protein and protein-DNA interactions to be determined cheaply and in a high-throughput manner. These data sets in turn allow us to generate hypotheses at the click of a mouse. For instance, knowing where and when a gene is expressed can help us narrow down the phenotypic search space when we don’t see a phenotype in a gene mutant under “normal” growth conditions. Coexpression analyses and association networks can provide high-quality candidate genes involved in a biological process of interest. Using Gene Ontology enrichment analysis and pathway visualization tools can help us make sense of our own ‘omics experiments and answer the question “what processes/pathways are being perturbed in our mutant of interest?”

[Material updated in June 2019]

Instructor(s)

Nicholas James Provart
University of Toronto
via Coursera
Free (audit)
English
Paid Certificate Available
Approx. 14 hours to complete
Self paced
Intermediate Level
Subtitles: Subtitles: Arabic, French, Portuguese (European), Italian, Vietnamese, German, Russian, English, Spanish