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  • imsharmanitin
    Postdoc Cancer Bioinformatics
    • Dec 2014
    • 17

    is this a technical replicate or biological replicate

    i know that biological replicate is one taken from different organism/sample while technical replicate is one from same organism/sample.

    However, I am not able to understand that a cell line treated with a drug three times separately to generate RNA-Seq data will be considered as biological replicate or technical replicate or a biological replicate but not in a strict sense. Also, will this be applicable for control sample?

    Thanks in advance
  • nucacidhunter
    Jafar Jabbari
    • Jan 2013
    • 1250

    #2
    I think it would be biological replicates and the same goes for control which should be treated with solvent without the drug. I imagine that there will be other treatments such as exposure time and dose as well in such experiments.

    Comment

    • jaspersaris
      Member
      • Nov 2008
      • 6

      #3
      As the variation during cultering is expected (and often is) far more variable then the technical reproducibility the biological replicate would be to repeat the actual incubations i.e. three times (for a triplicate).
      A technical replicate would be having the same RNA sample sequenced two times (i.e. a duplo).
      Often an experiment is repeated three times, getting n=3 for the experiment and statistics. In the experiment an incubation can be in duplo (i.e. two flasks stimulated with the same compound). Each incubation is then sequenced once.

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