Dear Thomas,
as my vote in the doodle poll indicated, I am not available at the 6th
of May, but I trust the consortium that the scientifically best approach
will be chosen. Until the 13.5. I am traveling and might have only
limited email access.
Best wishes
Ralf
On 26.04.2011 11:27, Thomas Giger wrote:
Dear All,
thank you for having filled in the doodle.
The *Geuvadis* *RNAseq phone conference* will take place on *May 6
from 11am - 12pm CEST.*
To participate in this call you have to do the following:
- if you call in from Switzerland dial: +41 58 262 07 22
- otherwise from other countries please find enclosed the list with
the "local access numbers for teleconferences" and dial the number
corresponding to your country.
Then enter the PIN: *611683 *
*In case you need assistance during the call - dial "OO" (nil nil) to
get in touch with an operator.*
*
*
I have written down the following points that should be discussed:
1. As of now we made plans that the different labs analyze samples
from one particular population (as listed in the workflow document
that I've sent around on April 7).
It would be a better experimental design if the samples were randomly
distributed among the different labs. Since there is still time to
react - do we want to switch the strategy?
2. How long are the library prep / sequencer queue up times in the
different labs (once you receive the RNA samples - how long do you
think will it take you to analyze them?).
If some labs expect to have much larger delays, we could make
arrangements that those labs get samples earlier than other labs.
This would also mean that we would all use the protocol that is used
at the time point when the first lab starts to analyze samples.
3. Which other samples (other than the 500 1KGP European samples)
should be analyzed by RNAseq?
4. Specifications for the small RNA protocol.
If you already know now, that you would like to have additional things
discussed - please let me know and I can make sure that we don't
forget about.
*
*
*
*
Looking forward to talk to you soon,
Thomas
*
*
=
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thomas Giger, Ph.D.
Department of Genetic Medicine and Development
University of Geneva Medical School
1 Rue Michel-Servet
Geneva 1211
Switzerland
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--
Dr. Ralf Sudbrak
EU Coordinator
MPG Cluster Berlin-Brandenburg
c/o Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics
Ihnestr. 63 - 73
D-14195 Berlin
Germany
Fon: +49 (30) 8413 1612
Fax: +49 (30) 8413 1380
sudbrak(a)molgen.mpg.de