Title: Characterising the effects of genetic variation on gene expression at single-cell resolution Speaker: Dr Anna Cuomo (Garvan Institute) Abstract: Single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) is widely applied to assess cellular heterogeneity in human tissues and cell-based models. Technological advances and exponential reduction in cost have enabled the first population-scale scRNA-seq studies, which have assayed single-cell transcriptomes in hundreds of genetically diverse individuals. However, current workflows to analyse these data remain primarily based on principles for analysing conventional bulk expression quantitative trait locus (eQTL) studies, and hence fail to fully exploit complex scRNA-seq readouts. A critical limitation of existing approaches is the need to define discrete cell types for eQTL mapping a priori, which limits novel opportunities to chart continuous and unbiased landscapes of regulatory variants. To address this, we recently proposed CellRegMap, a statistical framework to map regulatory variants across the continuous manifold of cellular environments estimated from scRNA-seq. CellRegMap allows for testing and characterisation of genetic effects on gene expression at the resolution of individual cells while flexibly sharing statistical strength related to cell states. Our framework provides a principled strategy to identify and characterise heterogeneous genetic effects that vary across cell states and cell types. Here, I will describe applications of CellRegMap on both real and simulated datasets, and describe future challenges in the broader field of single-cell population genetics. About the speaker: Anna completed undergraduate studies (BSc) in Applied Maths at Milano Polytechnic (Italy), and a MSc in bioinformatics from Delft University of Technology (Netherlands). She obtained her PhD at the University of Cambridge and the EMBL-EBI (UK) co-supervised by Dr. Oliver Stegle and Dr. John Marioni. After a brief bridging postdoc at the Sanger Institute with Prof. Nicole Soranzo, she started her current role as an EMBO Postdoctoral fellow at the Garvan Institute in Sydney (Australia), in the Joseph Powell and Daniel MacArthur Lab. Her main interest and expertise lies at the intersection between single-cell genomics and human genetics, and the development of statistical models to link DNA variants to single-cell expression profiles.