Hi ccard28
So it seems your question carries the answer already.
Basically let me remind you: housekeeping genes have one sole purpose: to allow relative expression comparison between samples at a globla scale. The only thing signifying a HK gene is that it is (presumably) not differentially expressed in the compared samples.
So back to your one sample: I guess you want to confirm that several individual amplicons have a different level of representation in the sample. So to have an reference point to compare against you can choose any amplicon (since it doesnt have to stable across samples), or simply use the geometric mean of all the amplicons tested.
And yes you could also simply present the Cts, only that is graphically not so intuitive because it doesnt really illuminate fold differences.
A little hint for when you start comparing across samples: if you dont know any HK genes yet (?) the simplest way is to compare the seq data across all samples, searching for a statistically NOT diff expressed target. If its stable across your sample population, it is by definition a HK gene for these samples. -Off cause you need to include enough samples to have statiscial relevance, but guess you would anyway.
Seqanswers Leaderboard Ad
Collapse
X
-
qPCR Validation of Single Sample
I have a question regarding qPCR validation of some RNA-Seq data I am working with. We are working with a population that has never been characterized using RNA-Seq and due to sample availability our first run is a single sample of a pool RNA from multiple individuals. Due to it only being a single sample I am not sure how to report qPCR validation data. I am running 10 or so genes that span low to high FPKM from our expression data and should get a consistent pattern in terms of expression levels on qPCR and then will be sequencing the qPCR amplicons. However due to it only being on sample I see no way to use a housekeeping gene. Is it possible to somehow just take Ct values and report them in a manner that shows consistency with FPKM values for those genes from the seq data? Our next objective is comparing two different samples, I understand we could use housekeeping genes there but I am a little stuck on how to report this initial single sample global characterization study. Any help would be appreciated.Tags: None
-
Latest Articles
Collapse
-
by seqadmin
This year’s Advances in Genome Biology and Technology (AGBT) General Meeting commemorated the 25th anniversary of the event at its original venue on Marco Island, Florida. While this year’s event didn’t include high-profile musical performances, the industry announcements and cutting-edge research still drew the attention of leading scientists.
The Headliner
The biggest announcement was Roche stepping back into the sequencing platform market. In the years since...-
Channel: Articles
03-03-2025, 01:39 PM -
-
by seqadmin
The human gut contains trillions of microorganisms that impact digestion, immune functions, and overall health1. Despite major breakthroughs, we’re only beginning to understand the full extent of the microbiome’s influence on health and disease. Advances in next-generation sequencing and spatial biology have opened new windows into this complex environment, yet many questions remain. This article highlights two recent studies exploring how diet influences microbial...-
Channel: Articles
02-24-2025, 06:31 AM -
ad_right_rmr
Collapse
News
Collapse
Topics | Statistics | Last Post | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Started by seqadmin, Yesterday, 05:03 AM
|
0 responses
16 views
0 reactions
|
Last Post
by seqadmin
Yesterday, 05:03 AM
|
||
Started by seqadmin, 03-19-2025, 07:27 AM
|
0 responses
14 views
0 reactions
|
Last Post
by seqadmin
03-19-2025, 07:27 AM
|
||
Started by seqadmin, 03-18-2025, 12:50 PM
|
0 responses
16 views
0 reactions
|
Last Post
by seqadmin
03-18-2025, 12:50 PM
|
||
Started by seqadmin, 03-03-2025, 01:15 PM
|
0 responses
185 views
0 reactions
|
Last Post
by seqadmin
03-03-2025, 01:15 PM
|
Leave a comment: