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ABC Seminar: Maria Carilli – Caltech – “Biophysical modeling with variational autoencoders for bimodal, single-cell RNA sequencing data”

April 28 @ 4:00 pm - 5:00 pm

Speaker:  Maria Carilli
Affiliation: California Institute of Technology
Position:  PhD Student, Lior Pachter Lab
Host: Dan MacDonald, PhD, Gibson Lab

Date: Monday April 28th, 2025
Time: 4:00-5:00PM ET
Zoom: https://partners.zoom.us/j/82163676866
Meeting ID: 821 6367 6866

Abstract: Transcription in individual cells is an inherently stochastic process, with non-deterministic numbers of RNA molecules produced per gene in transcriptional events across cells of the same cell type and condition. These distributions can be mathematical modeled according to biophysical hypotheses that specify system parameters of interest, such as rates of RNA splicing and degradation. While such stochastic models have been applied to infer RNA processing rates in fluorescence based assays, the scale of high-throughput sequencing data makes inference in this setting computationally challenging, especially as more molecular species, such as unspliced and spliced RNA molecules, can be quantified. We adapt an inference tool from machine learning, the variational autoencoder, that allows summarization and analysis of high-dimensional datasets to work with biophysical models of transcriptional dynamics. While preserving the variational autoencoder’s ability to reduce dimensionality of and denoise data, this work presents two major advances: one, principled integration and treatment of multimodal data (i.e., unspliced and spliced RNA molecules) through the employment of specific biophysical models; and two, inference of biophysical rates that parameterize those models, allowing the exploration of RNA dynamics across thousands of individual genes and cells.

Relevant Papers: Biophysical modeling with variational autoencoders for bimodal, single-cell RNA sequencing data, Spectral neural approximations for models of transcriptional dynamics

 Maria Carilli is a graduate student at Caltech working on theory and software development for the analysis of single-cell RNA sequencing data. She obtained undergraduate degrees in biophysics and music from the University of Colorado Boulder with a minor in computational biology. She is particularly interested in combining tools from machine learning with mathematical modeling of biophysical dynamics for deeper, and scalable, understanding of cellular systems.

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Details

Date:
April 28
Time:
4:00 pm - 5:00 pm
Event Category:
Website:
https://partners.zoom.us/j/82163676866

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