Program

Single Cell Genomics 2018 Program

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Monday, October 29

Time Session/Lecture info
08:00-09:00
Breakfast
 
09:00-09:10
Opening Remarks
 
09:10-10:30
Session I
 
09:10-09:35
Alexander van Oudenaarden, Hubrecht Institute-KNAW, Univ. Med. Center Utrecht & Utrecht University
Whole-organism clone-tracing using single-cell sequencing
09:35-09:50
Shalin Naik, Walter & Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research
SIS-seq, a molecular 'time machine', connects single cell fate with gene programs
09:50-10:05
Philipp Junker, Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine
Massively parallel single-cell lineage tracing reveals principles of fibrosis in heart injury and regeneration
10:05-10:30
Dana Pe'er, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
A spatio-temporal atlas of mouse endoderm development: when are cell fate choices made?
10:30-11:00
Coffee Break
 
11:00-12:20
Session II
 
11:00-11:25
Alex Schier, Harvard University
Reconstructing cellular biographies: insights from zebrafish
11:25-11:40
Xiao Wang, Stanford University
Three-dimensional intact-tissue sequencing of single-cell transcriptional states
11:40-11:55
Keren Bahar Halpern, Weizmann Institute of Science
Spatial reconstruction of tissue gene expression using paired-cell RNA sequencing
11:55-12:20
Rahul Satija, New York Genome Center
Comprehensive integration of single cell data
12:20-13:50
Lunch and poster session (Group 1)
 
13:50-15:30
Session III
 
13:50-14:15
Ido Amit, Weizmann Institute of Science
Single-cell genomics: a stepping stone for future immunology discoveries
14:15-14:40
Diane Mathis, Harvard University
Tissue—Treg phenotypic determinism
14:40-15:05
Aviv Regev, Broad Institute
From cell atlases to cell and tissue circuits in health and disease
15:05-15:30
Leila Perie, Institut Curie
Retracing the in vivo haematopoietic tree using single cell lineage tracing methods
15:30-16:00
Coffee Break
 
16:00-17:20
Session IV
 
16:00-16:25
John Marioni, European Bioinformatics Institute
Understanding cell fate decisions using single-cell genomics
16:25-16:40
Zohar Meir, Weizmann Institute of Science
Transcriptional, topological and cis-acting memory at single-cell resolution
16:40-16:55
Karoline Holler, Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine
Sub-single cell transcriptomics in the early zebrafish embryo — a systematic approach for understanding mRNA localization
16:55-17:20
Arjun Raj, University of Pennsylvania
Free will, determinism, and therapy resistance in cancer
17:20-19:20
Reception and poster session (Group 1)