Week 9
From LMU BioDB 2015
Revision as of 23:46, 26 October 2015 by Kdahlquist (Talk | contribs) (→Shared Journal Assignment: pasted in project team requests)
This journal entry is due on Tuesday, November 3, at midnight PST. (Monday night/Tuesday morning)
Contents
Overview
The purpose of this assignment is:
Individual Journal Assignment
- Store this journal entry as "username Week 9" (i.e., this is the text to place between the square brackets when you link to this page).
- Link from your user page to this Assignment page.
- Link to your journal entry from your user page.
- Link back from your journal entry to your user page.
- Don't forget to add the "Journal Entry" category to the end of your wiki page.
- Note: you can easily fulfill all of these links by adding them to your template and then using your template on your journal entry.
- For your assignment this week, you will keep an electronic laboratory notebook on your individual journal entry page for this week. An electronic laboratory notebook records all the manipulations you perform on the data and the answers to the questions throughout the protocol. Like a paper lab notebook found in a wet lab, it should contain enough information so that you or someone else could reproduce what you did using only the information from the notebook.
Homework Partners
For this week, the homework partners will be:
- Mary Alverson, Nicole Anguiano
- Ronald Legaspi, Kristen Zebrowski
- Brandon Klein, Brandon Litvak
- Josh Kuroda, Kevin Wyllie
- Mahrad Saeedi, Veronica Pacheco
- Lena Olufson, Emily Simso
- Trixie Roque, Anu Varshneya
- Jake Woodlee, Erich Yanoschik
- Store your journal entry in the shared Class Journal Week 9 page. If this page does not exist yet, go ahead and create it (congratulations on getting in first :) )
- Link to your journal entry from your user page.
- Link back from the journal entry to your user page.
- NOTE: you can easily fulfill the links part of these instructions by adding them to your template and using the template on your user page.
- Sign your portion of the journal with the standard wiki signature shortcut (
~~~~
). - Add the "Journal Entry" and "Shared" categories to the end of the wiki page (if someone has not already done so).
Project Team Requests
- In class on October 24, the teams will be assigned for the Final Class Project.
- There will be four teams of 4 students.
- Ultimately the teams will be assigned by Drs. Dahlquist and Dionsio based on balancing areas of expertise amongst the team members. However, we would like to gather your input into the formation of the teams. At this point in the semester, you have worked with at least five other people in the class (maybe more) as buddies on journal assignments. Please send an e-mail to both Dr. Dahlquist and Dr. Dionisio by Tuesday, October 22 giving us the names of three other people in the class whom you want to be on your team (you can also choose people that haven't been your journal buddy yet) and one person whom you prefer not to be on your team. Please give us a short explanation as to why you are choosing those particular people. We will consider all team requests, but we cannot guarantee that you will be matched with the people you picked. These e-mails will remain confidential to the instructors and will not be shared with your classmates.
- Also on October 24, the species will be assigned for the Final Class Project. The assignment of species will be decided in class between the teams and the instructors after the teams have been announced. So you can start to think about it before next week, the species under consideration by the instructors are:
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
- Shigella flexneri
- Chlamydia trachomatis
- Leishmania major
- Sinorhizobium melliloti
- You may propose a different species than one of the above, as long as it fulfills the following criteria:
- The genome is completely sequenced and has been published in a journal article
- The complete proteome set of data (UniProt XML and GOA) are available through the UniProt Complete Proteomes page and UniProt-GOA Downloads page, respectively.
- At least one DNA microarray dataset has been performed on this species, the data has been published in a journal article, and the complete dataset is publicly available and uses an ID system present in the UniProt XML. Sources of DNA microarray data include:
- NCBI GEO
- EBI ArrayExpress
- Stanford Microarray Database
- PUMAdb (Princeton Microarray Database)
- In addition, microarray data can sometimes be found as supplementary information with a journal article or on an investigator's own web site.