Fri, 26 May 2023

14:00 - 15:00
L3

Modelling the viral dynamics of the SARS-CoV-2 Delta and Omicron variants in different cell types

Dr Ada Yan
(Dept of Infectious Disease Imperial College London)
Abstract

The Omicron BA.1 variant of SARS-CoV-2 was more transmissible and less severe than the preceding Delta variant, including in hosts without previous infection or vaccination.  To investigate why this was the case, we conducted in vitro replication experiments in human nasal and lung cells, then constructed and fitted ODE models of varying levels of complexity to the data, using Markov chain Monte Carlo methods.  Our results fitting a simple model suggest that the basic reproduction number and growth rate are higher for Omicron in nasal cells, and higher for Delta in lung cells. As growth in nasal cells is thought to correspond to transmissibility and growth in lung cells is thought to correspond to severity, these results are consistent with epidemiological and clinical observations.  We then fitted a more complex model, including different virus entry pathways and the immune response, to the data, to understand the mechanisms leading to higher infectivity for Omicron in nasal cells. This work paves the way for using within-host mathematical models to analyse experimental data and understand the transmission potential of future variants. 

While presenting the results of this study, I will use them to open a wider discussion on common problems in mathematical biology, such as the situations in which complex models are preferable to simpler models; when it is appropriate to fix model parameters; and how to present results which are contingent on unidentifiable parameters.

Fri, 19 May 2023

14:00 - 15:00
Virtual

Mapping and navigating biology and chemistry with genome-scale imaging

Dr Imran Haque
(Recursion Pharmaceuticals)
Abstract

 

Image-based readouts of biology are information-rich and inexpensive. Yet historically, bespoke data collection methods and the intrinsically unstructured nature of image data have made these assays difficult to work with at scale. This presentation will discuss advances made at Recursion to industrialise the use of cellular imaging to decode biology and drive drug discovery. First, the use of deep learning allows the transformation of unstructured images into biologically meaningful representations, enabling a 'map of biology' relating genetic and chemical perturbations to scale drug discovery. Second, building such a map at whole-genome scale led to the discovery of a "proximity bias" globally confounding CRISPR-Cas9-based functional genomics screens. Finally, I will discuss how publicly-shared resources from Recursion, including the RxRx3 dataset and MolRec application, enable downstream research both on cellular images themselves and on deep learning-derived embeddings, making advanced image analysis more accessible to researchers worldwide.

Fri, 05 May 2023

14:00 - 15:00
Virtual

Data-driven protein design and molecular latent space simulators

Professor Andrew Ferguson
(Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering University of Chicago)
Abstract

Data-driven modeling and deep learning present powerful tools that are opening up new paradigms and opportunities in the understanding, discovery, and design of soft and biological materials. I will describe our recent applications of deep representational learning to expose the sequence-function relationship within homologous protein families and to use these principles for the data-driven design and experimental testing of synthetic proteins with elevated function. I will then describe an approach based on latent space simulators to learn ultra-fast surrogate models of protein folding and biomolecular assembly by stacking three specialized deep learning networks to (i) encode a molecular system into a slow latent space, (ii) propagate dynamics in this latent space, and (iii) generatively decode a synthetic molecular trajectory.

Fri, 28 Apr 2023

14:00 - 15:00
L3

Stochastic modeling of neurotransmission dynamics

Dr Stefanie Winkelmann
(Zuse Institute Berlin)
Abstract

Abstract: Neurotransmission at chemical synapses relies on the calcium-induced fusion of synaptic vesicles with the presynaptic membrane. The distance of the vesicle to the calcium channels determines the fusion probability and consequently the postsynaptic signal. After a fusion event, both the release site and the vesicle undergo a recovery process before becoming available for reuse again. For all these process components, stochastic effects are widely recognized to play an important role. In this talk, I will present our recent efforts on how to describe and structurally understand neurotransmission dynamics using stochastic modeling approaches. Starting with a linear reaction scheme, a method to directly compute the exact first- and second-order moments of the filtered output signal is proposedFor a modification of the model including explicit recovery steps, the stochastic dynamics are compared to the mean-field approximation in terms of reaction rate equations. Finally, we reflect on spatial extensions of the model, as well as on their approximation by hybrid methods.

References:

A. Ernst, C. Schütte, S. Sigrist, S. Winkelmann. Mathematical Biosciences343, 108760, 2022.

- A. Ernst, N. Unger, C. Schütte, A. Walter, S. Winkelmann. Under Review. https://arxiv.org/abs/2302.01635

 

Tue, 14 Mar 2023
16:00
C3

Linking vertex algebras and Wightman QFTs

Christopher Raymond
(Australian National University)
Abstract

There has been a great deal of interest in understanding the link between the axiomatic descriptions of conformal field theory given by vertex operator algebras and conformal nets. In recent work, we establish an equivalence between certain vertex algebras and conformally-symmetric quantum field theories in the sense of Wightman. In this talk I will give an overview of these results and discuss some of the difficulties that arise, the functional analytic properties of vertex algebras, and some of the ideas for future work in this area.

This is joint work with James Tener and Yoh Tanimoto.

A tale of many cities: Universal patterns in human urban mobility
Noulas, A Scellato, S Lambiotte, R Pontii, M Mascolo, C Machine Learning and the City: Applications in Architecture and Urban Design 467-471 (27 May 2022)

Today, 16:00, L1

Aleksander Horawa (North Wing) - Bitcoin, elliptic curves, and this building

Dr Jemima Tabeart (South Wing) - Numerical linear algebra for weather forecasting

Full details

What in the world is going on with open access and open research? Come along and hear from an array of exciting national and international speakers - and find out! Organised by the Bodleian Libraries, for Oxford staff and students, The Oxford Festival of Open Scholarship (OxFOS) covers a range of topical issues for a fortnight each year. This is an opportunity to explore and debate issues, and jointly look for solutions. We hope to interest and inspire you! 

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