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  • Adiro
    Junior Member
    • Jan 2019
    • 4

    ERCC spike-ins for prokaryotes

    Hi!
    I see that many people use ERCC spike-ins with prokaryotes, but looking at the manufacturer description I see that they only mention that it is good for eukaryotes... https://www.thermofisher.com/order/c...roduct/4456740

    I found some articles that asses the validity of the ERCC in eukaryotes, but never on prokaryotes...

    So can I use it in prokaryotes? anyone found an article assessing the validity of ERCC in prokaryotes?


    **I'm specifically interested in e.coli, and I really need spike ins because I suspect that most of the genes will express differently between the two conditions... If for example all the genes will be 2 times more expressed in condition A than in condition B, without spike-ins the differential expression will look like there was no change. If you have other suggestions for this scenario besides ERCC, I would love to know... **
  • Bukowski
    Senior Member
    • Jan 2010
    • 388

    #2
    I don't think they say it's only good for eukaryotes, just that it mimics the nature of eukaryotic transcripts in terms of nucleotide content, size distribution, polyadenylation etc. I think the bigger concern using them for prokaryotes is probably that a chunk of the ERCC spike ins are derived from bacterial sequences in the first place.

    If you're concerned about the derivation of the ERCC sequences, then there are artificial spike-in's available: https://www.rna-seqblog.com/spliced-...g-experiments/ (I would link to the sequins site, but there appears to be a configuration issue on their webserver)

    Given that you "already see many people use ERCC spike-ins with prokaryotes" what kind of additional validity are you looking for?

    Comment

    • cmbetts
      Senior Member
      • Jun 2012
      • 120

      #3
      I'd be careful about using them for Prokaryotes. Many of them are actually bacterial genes, mostly B.subtilis if I remember correctly, but also some antibiotic resistance genes descended from Affy controls. I'd download the fastas and align to your genome of interest before using them.

      Comment

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