Difference between revisions of "User:Lcozzuto"

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Luca Cozzuto got his five years degree in Pharmaceutical Biotechnologies at University of Naples "Federico II" in 2004 and his PhD in Molecular Medicine at European School of Molecular Medicine in 2009 ([http://www.semm.it]). During his degree thesis he studied the structure of chemically modified DNA quadruplex by using NMR together with molecular dynamics [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16248036]. During the four year of PhD he was involved in detection and characterization of bacterial RNA repeats showing a common of secondary structure [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18201379]. Here he learnt programming, database and website developing and a number of bioinformatics tools for detecting non coding RNAs, sequence clustering and sequence comparison. Moreover he was involved in the assembling and annotations of two bacterial genomes (sequenced by using 454 Roche platform), in the analysis of chip-seq data (using data obtained by Illumina technology) and in giving bioinformatic support to biological research [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20439489].  
 
Luca Cozzuto got his five years degree in Pharmaceutical Biotechnologies at University of Naples "Federico II" in 2004 and his PhD in Molecular Medicine at European School of Molecular Medicine in 2009 ([http://www.semm.it]). During his degree thesis he studied the structure of chemically modified DNA quadruplex by using NMR together with molecular dynamics [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16248036]. During the four year of PhD he was involved in detection and characterization of bacterial RNA repeats showing a common of secondary structure [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18201379]. Here he learnt programming, database and website developing and a number of bioinformatics tools for detecting non coding RNAs, sequence clustering and sequence comparison. Moreover he was involved in the assembling and annotations of two bacterial genomes (sequenced by using 454 Roche platform), in the analysis of chip-seq data (using data obtained by Illumina technology) and in giving bioinformatic support to biological research [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20439489].  
  

Revision as of 15:12, 15 October 2010

Luca Cozzuto

Lcozzuto.jpg

Bioinformatician

Email: luca.cozzuto@crg.es



Luca Cozzuto got his five years degree in Pharmaceutical Biotechnologies at University of Naples "Federico II" in 2004 and his PhD in Molecular Medicine at European School of Molecular Medicine in 2009 ([1]). During his degree thesis he studied the structure of chemically modified DNA quadruplex by using NMR together with molecular dynamics [2]. During the four year of PhD he was involved in detection and characterization of bacterial RNA repeats showing a common of secondary structure [3]. Here he learnt programming, database and website developing and a number of bioinformatics tools for detecting non coding RNAs, sequence clustering and sequence comparison. Moreover he was involved in the assembling and annotations of two bacterial genomes (sequenced by using 454 Roche platform), in the analysis of chip-seq data (using data obtained by Illumina technology) and in giving bioinformatic support to biological research [4].


My work at the Bioinformatics Unit:

  • assembly and annotation of genomics and transcriptomics data
  • chip-seq and clip-seq data analysis
  • developing a pipeline in perl, R and shell_script for analysis of chip-seq data
  • downstream analyses
  • developing a genome browser to display bacterial genome annotation


Luca Cozzuto may be contacted by email at mailto:luca.cozzuto@crg.es

Bioinformatics Core Facility @ CRG — 2011-2024