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?"

Plant Bioinformatics

Plant Bioinformatics
This course is part of Plant Bioinformatic Methods Specialization

Instructor: Nicholas James Provart
Access provided by Ecole Supérieure des Industries du Textile et de l'Habillement
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Reviewed on Jul 4, 2020
Overall the course is good. However, lecture should be more in detail.
Reviewed on Jun 2, 2022
Very helpful to understand the different tools of bioinformatics
Reviewed on Jul 30, 2020
Lectures were short, but very informative and the lab exercise helped to explore multiple bioinformatics tools and database.
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University of Toronto

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