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  • tboothby
    Member
    • May 2011
    • 56

    BLAST for spliced isoforms?

    Hey,
    Does anyone know if it is possible to setup a stand alone BLAST search that will return spliced isoforms?

    I was thinking something that would look for alignments followed by a break of some minimum size (say 50bp) followed by more alignments...

    Is there a better way to do this? I have RNAseq data but no reference genome. I am looking for a way to find all the spliced isoforms in this data.

    Thanks.
  • rskr
    Senior Member
    • Oct 2010
    • 249

    #2
    Assemble your data first then map the assemblies, that is my recommendation.

    Comment

    • tboothby
      Member
      • May 2011
      • 56

      #3
      I have assembled sequences... so then I map the rnaseq sequences to themselves? What software?

      Comment

      • rskr
        Senior Member
        • Oct 2010
        • 249

        #4
        Map the contigs with BLAST or whatever rna, est mapping software you want.

        Comment

        • tboothby
          Member
          • May 2011
          • 56

          #5
          right... I am asking if there is a way to setup a stand alone BLAST search to specifically return only likely splice isoforms. Do you know how to do this?

          Comment

          • rskr
            Senior Member
            • Oct 2010
            • 249

            #6
            BLAST? I think there is a set of tools at NCBI called splign and spidey that will chain together HSPs with a Gene model. BLAST is kind of a dum way to do it IMO, but lots of people have used BLAST for things it wasn't designed for before in the past.

            Comment

            • tboothby
              Member
              • May 2011
              • 56

              #7
              Yea, but don't you use a genomic reference for those? No reference genome here unfortunately.

              Comment

              • rskr
                Senior Member
                • Oct 2010
                • 249

                #8
                Ah yes, mapping mRNA to mRNA with exons. I don't know a way to do that, but I was wishing BLAST would do that just yesterday.

                Comment

                • tboothby
                  Member
                  • May 2011
                  • 56

                  #9
                  Ah well, if you don't know how to do it then maybe someone else does.

                  Comment

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