Start Date: | 9/7/2023 | Start Time: | 2:00 PM |
End Date: | 9/7/2023 | End Time: | 4:00 PM |
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Event Description
BIOMED Master's Thesis Defense
Title:
Mitochondrial Sequencing and Single-Cell RNA Sequencing Combination: A Promising Technique To Effectively Understand the Cell Dynamics in Breast Cancer
Speaker: Anh Nguyen, Master's Candidate School of Biomedical Engineering, Science and Health Systems Drexel University Advisor: Katherine Nathanson, MD Pearl Basser Professor Deputy Director Abramson Cancer Center Department of Translational Medicine and Human Genetics Perelman School of Medicine University of Pennsylvania
Details: As demand for new and effective treatments for cancer increases, insight into cell dynamics in cancers is necessary. In 2018, a new technique called single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) was developed, opening a new door to understanding individual cell fates and gene expressions in complex organisms. However, the technique alone still has limitations on the scale and accuracy when it comes to tracking somatic nuclear mutations.
To address this issue, I propose combining mitochondrial DNA sequencing (mtDNA-seq) with scRNA-seq with the hypothesis that the combination will enhance the accuracy of lineage tracing in humans and resolve the clonal population; somatic mtDNA mutations will serve as "natural barcodes" to accurately indicate cellular relationships. Breast tissues, both tumor and normal, were collected from cancer patients and prophylactic patients. The tissues were then processed through tissue dissociation to obtain single cells and then through 10X protocol to gain cDNA. The resulting cDNAs were processed for both scRNA-seq and mtDNA-seq.
The findings indicate that 1) different tissue dissociation methods can result in different tissue profile in scRNA-seq analysis, 2) cells from different cell types develop from a common progenitor, and 3) cancerous cells develop from polyclonal mutations. This combined technique is reliable enough to generate a comprehensive “cell map” that allows a deeper understanding of the heterogeneity and dynamics in cancers, with the potential to discover new screening targets and better treatments. |
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Location: Bossone Research Center, Room 709, located at 32nd and Market Streets. Also on Zoom. |
Audience: Undergraduate StudentsGraduate StudentsFacultyStaff |
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