Edit
Exploring Gene and Environmental Exposure interactions to understand Health and Disease – Human Ecosystems

Human Ecosystems

Studying how the environment impacts human health

Exploring Gene and Environmental Exposure interactions to understand Health and Disease

19th – 23rd February, 2024

We had a great week at our first Human Ecosystems Training Course “Exploring gene and environmental exposure interactions to understand human health and disease” .

The EMBL-EBI training team welcomed 28 participants from Europe, Africa, the Americas and Asia to participate in a brand-new course exploring gene and exposure interactions. Fourteen trainers working at the forefront of human cohort and exposure research gave lectures and led hands-on training as part of the 5-day course. Topics included finding and exploring disease associations in human cohort data, conducting polygenic scores and genome-wide association studies, identifying genotype and exposure interactions, and approaches to define the molecular mechanisms of exposures. Prof Roel Vermeulen (University of Utrecht) gave an EMBL-wide seminar on the Exposome. Course participants then had the opportunity to explore a new electric car which is about to embark on a journey to measure air pollution levels across European cities, a project led by Roel and Kees de Hoogh (Swiss TPH) .

We are very thankful to our trainers for providing their expertise; Maria Cerezo (EMBL-EBI), Emily Jefferson (HDR UK, Uni of Dundee), Elliot Sollis (EMBL-EBI), Sam Lambert (Uni of Cambridge), Tomas Fitzgerald (EMBL-EBI), Natàlia Vilor-Tejedor (CRG, SPN),  Xiangyu Jack Ge (Wellcome Sanger Institute), Giorgia Renne (EMBL-Heidelberg), Pu Xia (University of Birmingham), Marcos C. (EMBL-EBI), Kees de Hoogh (Swiss TPH), Roel Vermeulen (University of Utrecht), Marc Jan Bonder (University of Groningen) and Oliver Stegle (EMBL Heidelberg).

We also thank the EMBL-EBI training and support staff, especially the Course Organisers Dayane Araújo and Marta Lloret Llinares, and Scientific Organisers Amy Foreman, Mallory Freeberg, and Saskia Hiltemann.

Training course organisers

Photo gallery

Categories

Edit