Project Organization and Management for Genomics

Good data organization is the foundation of any research project. It not only sets you up well for an analysis, but it also makes it easier to come back to the project later and share with collaborators, including your most important collaborator - future you.

Organizing a project that includes sequencing involves many components. There’s the experimental setup and conditions metadata, measurements of experimental parameters, sequencing preparation and sample information, the sequences themselves and the files and workflow of any bioinformatics analysis. So much of the information of a sequencing project is digital, and we need to keep track of our digital records in the same way we have a lab notebook and sample freezer. In this lesson, we’ll go through the project organization and documentation that will make an efficient bioinformatics workflow possible. Not only will this make you a more effective bioinformatics researcher, it also prepares your data and project for publication, as grant agencies and publishers increasingly require this information.

In this lesson, we’ll be using data from a study of experimental evolution using E. coli. More information about this dataset is available here. In this study there are several types of files:

Throughout the analysis, we’ll also generate files from the steps in the bioinformatics pipeline and documentation on the tools and parameters that we used.

In this lesson you will learn:

Getting Started

This lesson assumes no prior experience with the tools covered in the workshop. However, learners are expected to have some familiarity with biological concepts, including the concept of genomic variation within a population. Participants should bring their laptops and plan to participate actively.

This lesson is part of a workshop that uses data hosted on an Amazon Machine Instance (AMI). Workshop participants will be given information on how to log-in to the AMI during the workshop.

For Instructors

If you are teaching this lesson in a workshop, please see the Instructor notes.

Schedule

Setup Download files required for the lesson
00:00 1. Data Tidiness What metadata should I collect?
How should I structure my sequencing data and metadata?
00:30 2. Planning for NGS Projects How do I plan and organize a genome sequencing project?
What information does a sequencing facility need?
What are the guidelines for data storage?
01:00 3. Examining Data on the NCBI SRA Database How do I access public sequencing data?
01:30 Finish

The actual schedule may vary slightly depending on the topics and exercises chosen by the instructor.