Speaker: Dr Laura Luebbert (Broad Institute) Abstract: There are an estimated 300,000 mammalian viruses from which infectious diseases in humans may arise. They inhabit human tissues such as the lungs, blood, and brain and often remain undetected. Efficient and accurate detection of viral infection is vital to understanding its impact on human health and to make accurate predictions to limit adverse effects, such as future epidemics. The increasing use of high-throughput sequencing methods in research, agriculture, and healthcare provides an opportunity for the cost-effective surveillance of viral diversity and investigation of virus-disease correlation. However, existing methods for identifying viruses in sequencing data rely on and are limited to reference genomes or cannot retain single-cell resolution through cell barcode tracking. We introduce a method that accurately and rapidly detects viral sequences in bulk and single-cell transcriptomics data based on highly conserved amino acid domains, which enables the detection of RNA viruses covering up to 10^12 virus species. The analysis of viral presence and host gene expression in parallel at single-cell resolution allows for the characterization of host viromes and the identification of viral tropism and host responses. We applied our method to identify putative novel viruses in rhesus macaque PBMC data that display cell type specificity and whose presence correlates with altered host gene expression. About the speaker: Laura recently completed her Ph.D. in Computational Biology at the California Institute of Technology in the US. She recently wrote a pipeline for the detection of previously unknown viral sequences in NGS data and will apply her work towards the detection of emerging pathogens as a postdoctoral researcher in the laboratory of Prof. Pardis Sabeti at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard (with a joint affiliation with Harvard University). Laura is passionate about bridging the gap between biology and bioinformatics, having worked in both wet lab and computer science roles. Her first software project, gget, which facilitates access to large genomic databases, has been downloaded over 100,000 times and has become a worldwide standard in transcriptomic and proteomic data processing. This event will be online. Zoom: https://uni-sydney.zoom.us/j/84087321707