User:Alexander Wait Zaranek: Difference between revisions

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As a [http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~biophys/ biophysics] student at Harvard, I received my introduction to molecular biology in [http://genetics.mgh.harvard.edu/szostakweb/ Jack Szostak's] lab and learned computational biology with [http://arep.med.harvard.edu George Church]. I was a teaching fellow for classes on [http://bio.freelogy.org/wiki/IGEM2005#Photos synthetic biology] and [http://bio.freelogy.org/wiki/Biophysics_101 personal genomics] and, more recently, I've continued to teach in these areas as a guest lecturer for [http://web.mit.edu/HST.508/www/schedule.html HST508] and [[Harvard:Biophysics_101/2009:Schedule|Biophysics 101]].  
As a [http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~biophys/ biophysics] student at Harvard, I received my introduction to molecular biology in [http://genetics.mgh.harvard.edu/szostakweb/ Jack Szostak's] lab and learned computational biology with [http://arep.med.harvard.edu George Church]. I was a teaching fellow for classes on [http://bio.freelogy.org/wiki/IGEM2005#Photos synthetic biology] and [http://bio.freelogy.org/wiki/Biophysics_101 personal genomics] and, more recently, I've continued to teach in these areas as a guest lecturer for [http://web.mit.edu/HST.508/www/schedule.html HST508] and [[Harvard:Biophysics_101/2009:Schedule|Biophysics 101]].  


I have been director of informatics at the [http://www.personalgenomes.org Personal Genome Project] since 2005.  The PGP is the only project worldwide that provides "open-access" to well integrated human tissue-samples, genetic data and phenotype data.  We were one of the [http://creativecommons.org/tag/personal-genome-project first users of CC0].  The commitment to openness has also led to my longtime collaboration on the [http://Polonator.org Polonator] which is the only open-innovation instrument platform for DNA sequencing.  The Polonator, and related technologies, is part of the revolution that brought DNA sequencing costs down by 10,000-fold in the last four years.  More recently it has also served as a platform for synthetic chemistry and cell biology in the same open device.  Finally, along with my colleagues at the PGP, I've launched an open, genome interpretation system, [http://evidence.personalgenomes.org GET-Evidence].  '''We are actively seeking new editors!'''  Please contact me if you'd like help [http://evidence.personalgenomes.org/guide_editing getting started] or just log-in and try it out for yourself.   
I have been director of informatics at the [http://www.personalgenomes.org Personal Genome Project] since 2005.  The PGP is the only project worldwide that provides "open-access" to well integrated human tissue-samples, genetic data and phenotype data.  We were one of the [http://creativecommons.org/tag/personal-genome-project first users of CC0].  The commitment to openness has also led to my longtime collaboration on the [http://Polonator.org Polonator] which is the only open-innovation instrument platform for DNA sequencing.  The Polonator, and related technologies, is part of the revolution that reduced human DNA sequencing costs by a million-fold since the completion of the Human Genome Project.  More recently it has also served as a platform for synthetic chemistry and cell biology in the same open device.  Finally, along with my colleagues at the PGP, I've launched an open, genome interpretation system, [http://evidence.personalgenomes.org GET-Evidence].  '''We are actively seeking new editors!'''  Please contact me if you'd like help [http://evidence.personalgenomes.org/guide_editing getting started] or just log-in and try it out for yourself.   


In a past-life I was a contractor for a telecom equipment supplier. My team's software translated electronics design data into instructions for a medium volume, high-mix electronics factory. I am a contributor to the [http://webstds.ipc.org IPC-2511 (GenCAM)] standard. That experience helped shape my thinking on open biological factories.   
In a past-life I was a contractor for a telecom equipment supplier. My team's software translated electronics design data into instructions for a medium volume, high-mix electronics factory. I am a contributor to the [http://webstds.ipc.org IPC-2511 (GenCAM)] standard. That experience helped shape my thinking on open biological factories.   

Revision as of 10:33, 10 February 2011

Alexander (Sasha) Wait Zaranek
Alexander (Sasha) Wait Zaranek

a.k.a. Sasha - awaitz @ post.harvard.edu

Education

  • PhD Biophysics, Harvard (2009)
  • BSc Computer Science, University of Toronto (1998)

Short Biography

As a biophysics student at Harvard, I received my introduction to molecular biology in Jack Szostak's lab and learned computational biology with George Church. I was a teaching fellow for classes on synthetic biology and personal genomics and, more recently, I've continued to teach in these areas as a guest lecturer for HST508 and Biophysics 101.

I have been director of informatics at the Personal Genome Project since 2005. The PGP is the only project worldwide that provides "open-access" to well integrated human tissue-samples, genetic data and phenotype data. We were one of the first users of CC0. The commitment to openness has also led to my longtime collaboration on the Polonator which is the only open-innovation instrument platform for DNA sequencing. The Polonator, and related technologies, is part of the revolution that reduced human DNA sequencing costs by a million-fold since the completion of the Human Genome Project. More recently it has also served as a platform for synthetic chemistry and cell biology in the same open device. Finally, along with my colleagues at the PGP, I've launched an open, genome interpretation system, GET-Evidence. We are actively seeking new editors! Please contact me if you'd like help getting started or just log-in and try it out for yourself.

In a past-life I was a contractor for a telecom equipment supplier. My team's software translated electronics design data into instructions for a medium volume, high-mix electronics factory. I am a contributor to the IPC-2511 (GenCAM) standard. That experience helped shape my thinking on open biological factories.

My professional interests include: personalized medicine, exascale computing, and free knowledge business models. When I can, I still enjoy tinkering with quantum lifeforms and synthetic biology.

Publications

  1. Ashley EA, Butte AJ, Wheeler MT, Chen R, Klein TE, Dewey FE, Dudley JT, Ormond KE, Pavlovic A, Morgan AA, Pushkarev D,Neff NF ,Hudgins L, Gong L, Hodges LM, Berlin DS, Thorn CF, Sangkuhl K, Hebert JM, Woon M, Sagreiya H, Whaley R, Knowles JW, Chou MF, Thakuria JV, Rosenbaum AM, Alexander Wait Zaranek, Church GM, Greely HT, Quake SR, Altman RB (2010) Clinical assessment incorporating a personal genome. Lancet 375: 1525-35
  2. Alexander Wait Zaranek, Levanon EY, Zecharia T, Clegg T, Church GM (2010) A Survey of Genomic Traces Reveals a Common Sequencing Error, RNA Editing and DNA Editing. PLoS Genetics 6(5): e1000954. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1000954
  3. Drmanac R, Burns NL, Callow MJ, Carnevali P, Dahl F, Fernandez A, Halpern AL, Kermani BG, Nazarenko I, Nilsen GB, Pant KP, Sparks AB, Staker B, Yeung G, Baccash J, Borcherding AP, Brownley A, Cedeno R, Chen L, Chernikoff D, Cheung A, Chirita R, Curson B, Ebert J, Hacker CR, Hartlage R, Hauser B, Huang S, Jiang Y, Karpinchyk V, Koenig M, Kong C, Landers T, Le C, Liu J, McBride CE, Morenzoni M, Morey RE, Mutch K, Perazich H, Perry K, Peters BA, Peterson J, Pethiyagoda CL, Pothuraju K, Richter C, Rosenbaum AM, Roy S, Shafto J, Shananhovich V, Shannon KW, Sheppy CG, Sun M, Thakuria JV, Tran A, Vu D, Wu X, Alexander Wait Zaranek, Drmanac S, Oliphant AR, Banyai WC, Martin B, Ballinger DG, Church GM, Reid CA (2009) Human Genome Sequencing Using Unchained Base Reads on Self-assembling DNA Nanoarrays. Science 2010 Jan 1;327(5961):78-81. Epub 2009 Nov 5;
  4. Whiteford N, Skelly T, Curtis C, Ritchie M, Lohr A, Alexander Wait Zaranek, Abnizove I, Brown C, (2009) Swift: Primary Data Analysis for the Illumina Solexa Sequencing Platform. Bioinformatics 25(17):2194-2199.
  5. Kim JI, Ju YS, Park HS, Kim S, Lee S, Yi JH, Mudge J, Miller NA, Hong D, Bell CJ, Kim HS, Chung IS, Seo SH, Yun JY, Woo HN, Lee H, Suh D, Lee S, Park H, Kim JY, Gokcumen O, Mills RE, Alexander Wait Zaranek, Thakuria J, Wu X, Kim RW, Huntley JJ, Luo S, Schroth GP, Wu TD, Yang KS, Kim H, Church GM, Lee C, Kingsmore SF, Seo JS (2009) A highly annotated whole genome sequence of a Korean Individual. Nature Jul 8; 195
  6. Li JB, Gao Y, Aach J, Zhang K, Kryukov GV, Xie B, Ahlford A, Yoon J-K, Rosenbaum AM, Alexander Wait Zaranek, LeProust E, Sunyaev SR, Church GM (2009) Multiplex padlock capturing and sequencing reveal human hypermutable CpG variations. Genome Research Sep;19(9):1606-15.
  7. Alexander Wait Zaranek, Clegg T, Vandewege W, Church GM: Free Factories: Unified Infrastructure for Data Intensive Web Services. USENIX Annual Technical Conference 2008: 391-404.

PubMed