ryan_thompson_resume.txt 12 KB

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  1. Ryan C. Thompson
  2. Contact Address:
  3. 8656 Via Mallorca
  4. Unit G
  5. La Jolla, CA 92037
  6. Phone: (908) 922-7470
  7. Email: rct@thompsonclan.org
  8. Website: https://github.com/DarwinAwardWinner
  9. Summary
  10. ==========
  11. * Well-rounded computational biologist with deep knowledge of biology,
  12. mathematics, and programming
  13. * 9 years of bioinformatics experience answering a wide range of
  14. complex biological questions through analysis of large NGS- and
  15. microarray-based whole transcriptome and epigenetic data sets
  16. * Strong focus on sound statistical analysis, effective data
  17. visualization and communication, and making expert knowledge and
  18. successful analysis methods available as re-usable software tools
  19. * Supportive team member with a strong ability to foster
  20. cross-disciplinary literacy by explaining concepts at the right
  21. level of abstraction
  22. Education
  23. ==========
  24. The Scripps Research Institute
  25. * Ph. D. in Bioinformatics, expected 2017
  26. University of Virginia
  27. * B.S. in Biology, B.A. in Mathematics, 2009
  28. * Echols Scholar
  29. Research Experience
  30. ==========
  31. Salomon Lab, The Scripps Research Institute
  32. ----------
  33. La Jolla, CA; 2012 - 2017
  34. Contact: Dr. Andrew Su, asu@scripps.edu
  35. * Created an open source, reproducible workflow to analyze a large
  36. multi-omics next-gen sequencing dataset of 220 RNA-seq and ChIP-seq
  37. samples to reveal interactions between differential histone
  38. methylation and differential gene expression during T-cell
  39. activation, as well as key differences in activation between naïve
  40. and memory cells [2, 3].
  41. * Investigated effects of life-span-extending drug on worm gene
  42. expression over time revealing that the drug retards age-related
  43. “transcriptional drift”, preserving a youthful phenotype at the
  44. molecular level. [4]
  45. * Significantly improved performce of machine learning classifier for
  46. identifying transplant rejection by developing appropriate
  47. single-sample microarray normalization procedures[1], including
  48. training a custom set of frozen RMA normalization vectors.
  49. Classifier is currently being developed into a clinical test for
  50. transplant dysfunction.
  51. * Implemented a systems biology tool to analyze and efficiently
  52. present and summarize differential expression for multiple gene set
  53. & pathway methods run on multiple pathway databases, as well as
  54. differential expression of individual genes within each pathway.
  55. * Performed comparative analysis of multiple differential expression
  56. statistical models to define best practice for optimal sensitivity
  57. while maintaining false positive control. Presented on theoretical
  58. and practical similarities and differences between methods.
  59. * Taught basic RNA-seq theory and practical analysis for the
  60. graduate-level introductory bioinformatics course.
  61. * Evaluated and optimized cost and performance of custom protocol for
  62. RNA-seq of human and primate blood samples while minimizing nuisance
  63. globin reads. Increased yield of useful reads nearly 2-fold. [7]
  64. * Adapted common normalization methods from RNA-seq to improve
  65. performance in analysis of RASL-seq experiments. [5]
  66. * Performed a comprehensive comparative evaluation of over 20 subtly
  67. different statistical models for differential methylation in
  68. Illumina 450k arrays, selecting a model that best explained the
  69. observed sources and trends of variation in the data, including
  70. cross-domain application of a method originally designed for RNA-seq
  71. data.
  72. * Active member of the Bioconductor community and contributing
  73. developer for several Bioconductor packages.
  74. * Mentored 2 coworkers in learning bioinformatics.
  75. Summer Internship, Informatics IT, Merck & Co.
  76. ----------
  77. Boston, MA; 2011
  78. Contact: Adnan Derti, adnan.derti@gmail.com
  79. * Built a transcriptome assembly and quantification pipeline using
  80. Cufflinks, including fully-automated cluster job control for
  81. high-throughput reproducible analysis, and presented a conceptual
  82. overview of Cufflinks' assembly and quantification algorithms to
  83. help the team understand Cufflinks.
  84. * Assisted in a molecular genetics study to evaluate peformance of two
  85. variant calling algorithms in detection of causal mutations in
  86. antibiotic-resistant bacterial genomes.
  87. Gaasterland Lab, UCSD Bioinformatcs
  88. ----------
  89. La Jolla, CA; 2010 - 2012
  90. Contact: Terry Gaasterland, gaasterland@ucsd.edu
  91. * Designed and implemented Deloxer, a critical software step in a new
  92. Illumina mate-pair sequencing protocol using Cre recombination.
  93. Deloxer is published[8] and now in use in several labs around the
  94. world.
  95. * Performed a molecular genetics study to find potential causal
  96. mutations for fatal iron overload disease in critically endangered
  97. black rhinoceros by de novo assembly of black rhino transcriptome
  98. using Trinity and comparison to closely-related white rhino
  99. transcriptome. Developed a custom pipeline to match up ortholog gene
  100. pairs, discover single-nucleotide differences between them, and
  101. functionally annotate these differences, and delivered a list of
  102. potential causal variants to collaborators for follow-up.
  103. * Helped design & implement a large-scale high-throughput exome
  104. sequencing pipeline for SNP discovery and functional annotation,
  105. including QC and validation of on-target coverage depth and
  106. reproducibility of coverage.
  107. * Created a fully-automated pipeline to produce quality-control
  108. metrics and plots for Illumina high-throughput sequencing data for
  109. early identification of failed runs or samples.
  110. * Investigated the binding motif specificity of ZASC1 transcription
  111. factor in mouse T-cells using Affymetrix expression microarrays in
  112. ZASC1 siRNA knockdown experiment.
  113. * Analyzed miRNA target predictions using GO & KEGG grouping to
  114. identify target pathways of autophagy-related miRNAs for biological validation.
  115. Timko Lab, U. of Virginia Biology
  116. ----------
  117. Charlottesville, VA; 2007 - 2009
  118. Contact: Paul J. Rushton, Paul.Rushton@sdstate.edu
  119. * Undergraduate thesis: Designed and implemented Contig Farmer, an
  120. algorithm for efficient selective contig assembly starting from
  121. “seed” sequences of interest, and used Contig Farmer to accelerate
  122. transcription factor gene discovery in cowpea and tobacco shotgun
  123. genomic sequence data[6].
  124. * Investigated transcription factors mediating plant stress response
  125. using expression microarray time-course, and refined the custom
  126. microarray design using data from previous runs to identify and
  127. eliminate uninformative probes, yielding an improved design for
  128. future studies.
  129. * Acted as interpreter to explain complex biological concepts to
  130. programmers and explain complex computational problems to
  131. biologists.
  132. Skills
  133. ==========
  134. Computing Skills: R/BioConductor, Python, Perl, Lisp, Java, C#, C++;
  135. Git version control; Remote UNIX system administration & software
  136. compilation, computing cluster job management & parallel computation
  137. * Public code: https://github.com/DarwinAwardWinner
  138. * StackOverflow Profile: http://stackoverflow.com/users/125921
  139. Statistics & Data Analysis: Multi-omics NGS & microarray analysis,
  140. multi-factor linear and generalized linear regression, experimental
  141. design and parametrization, empirical Bayesian methods, predictive
  142. modeling of clinical outcomes, machine learning classifier training &
  143. validation, survival analysis, data visualization & presentation,
  144. reproducible research practices
  145. Wet Lab: PCR, molecular cloning, recombinant protein purification,
  146. epitope mapping, site-directed mutagenesis, 2D gels, real-time PCR,
  147. and associated data analysis
  148. Languages: English: native speaker; German: written and spoken
  149. Other Work Experience
  150. ==========
  151. Computing Advisor & Help Desk, U. Va. IT Dept. Charlottesville, VA; 2005 - 2007
  152. * Provided support via phone and on-site for students, faculty, and
  153. staff having problems with computers, phone system, network access,
  154. malware, hardware setup, and university web services
  155. * Tasks included support for university-provided software, virus
  156. removal, iPod recovery, printer setup and repair, diagnosis of
  157. hardware malfunctions, and data recovery from failing hard disks
  158. Summer Sailing Instructor, Raritan Yacht Club Perth Amboy, NJ; 2006 - 2009
  159. * Instructed children ages 8-18 in sailing skills, safety, seamanship,
  160. knots, rigging & de-rigging boats, navigation, and racing strategy
  161. and technique, with an emphasis on building character and
  162. self-reliance
  163. * Ensured safety of students and staff by maintaining boats and
  164. equipment in good repair, by being vigilant to traffic and hazards
  165. on a busy waterway, and by communicating and coordinating
  166. efficiently with other staff
  167. * Helped organize, run, and referee several regattas per season for
  168. students from RYC and neighboring yacht clubs
  169. Writings and Publications
  170. ==========
  171. [1] Sunil Kurian, Enrique Velazquez, Ryan Thompson, Thomas Whisenant,
  172. Stanley Rose, Nicole Riley, Frank Harrison, Terri Gelbart, John
  173. Friedewald, Susan Brietigam, Michael Abecassis, and Daniel Salomon.
  174. Orthogonal comparison of molecular signatures of kidney transplants
  175. with subclinical and clinical acute rejection – equivalent performance
  176. is agnostic to either technology or platform. American Journal of
  177. Transplantation, 2017.
  178. [2] Sarah LaMere, Ryan C. Thompson, Xiangzhi Meng, H. Kiyomi Komori,
  179. A. Mark, and Daniel R. Salomon. H3K27 methylation dynamics during CD4
  180. T cell activation: regulation of JAK/STAT and IL12RB2 expression by
  181. JMJD3. Journal of Immunology (in review), 2017.
  182. [3] Sarah LaMere, Ryan C. Thompson, H. Kiyomi Komori, Adam Mark, and
  183. Daniel R. Salomon. Promoter H3K4 methylation dynamically reinforces
  184. activation-induced pathways in human CD4 T cells. Genes & Immunity,
  185. May 2016.
  186. [4] Ryan C. Thompson, Terri Gelbart, Steven R. Head, Phillip
  187. Ordoukhanian, Courtney Mullen, Dongmei Han, Dora M. Berman, Amelia
  188. Bartholomew, Norma S. Kenyon, and Daniel R. Salomon. Optimizing yield
  189. of deep RNA sequencing for gene expression profiling of peripheral
  190. blood samples from cynomolgus monkeys (Macaca fascicularis). Journal
  191. of Biological Methods (in review), 2016.
  192. [5] Erick R. Scott, H. Benjamin Larman, Ali Torkamani, Nicholas J.
  193. Schork, Nathan Wineinger, Max Nanis, Ryan C. Thompson, Reza B.
  194. Beheshti Zavareh, Luke L. Lairson, Peter G. Schultz, and Andrew I. Su.
  195. RASLseqTools: opensource methods for designing and analyzing
  196. RNA-mediated oligonucleotide Annealing, Selection, and, Ligation
  197. sequencing (RASL-seq) experiments. Nucleic Acids Research (in review),
  198. 2016.
  199. [6] Sunitha Rangaraju, Gregory M Solis, Ryan C Thompson, Rafael L
  200. Gomez-Amaro, Leo Kurian, Sandra E Encalada, Alexander B Niculescu,
  201. Daniel R Salomon, and Michael Petrascheck. Suppression of
  202. transcriptional drift extends C. elegans lifespan by postponing the
  203. onset of mortality. eLife, 4, 2015.
  204. [7] SM Kurian, AN Williams, T Gelbart, D Campbell, TS Mondala, SR
  205. Head, S Horvath, L Gaber, R Thompson, T Whisenant, et al. Molecular
  206. Classifiers for Acute Kidney Transplant Rejection in Peripheral Blood
  207. by Whole Genome Gene Expression Profiling. American Journal of
  208. Transplantation, 14(5):1164–1172, 2014.
  209. [8] Filip Van Nieuwerburgh, Ryan C. Thompson, Jessica Ledesma, Dieter
  210. Deforce, Terry Gaasterland, Phillip Ordoukhanian, and Steven R Head.
  211. Illumina Mate-Paired DNA Sequencing Library Preparation Using Cre-Lox
  212. Recombination. Nucleic Acids Research, page gkr1000, 2011.
  213. [9] Ryan C. Thompson, Paul J. Rushton, Tom W. Laudeman, and Michael P.
  214. Timko. Contig Farmer: a tool for extracting maximal-length contiguous
  215. sequences from a database of short sequence reads (Undergraduate
  216. Thesis). June 2009.
  217. http://darwinawardwinner.github.io/resume/examples/UVa/contigfarmer.pdf
  218. [10] Ryan C. Thompson. The sources and limits of geometric rigor from
  219. Euclid through Descartes. May 2008.
  220. http://darwinawardwinner.github.io/resume/examples/UVa/math-history-paper.pdf
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