Seqanswers Leaderboard Ad

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • how to identify differentially expressed genes from cuffdiff output?

    Hi guys,
    have a question about the cuffdiff output "differential expression testing".

    For most of you might sound "naive" but I'm new to this field and I
    have very little background in statistic.

    So, I have compared a control sample with 2 biological replicates
    using cuffdiff. I have now about 4000 genes which were tested.

    1. How do I extrapolate the genes which are up- or downregulated from the 4000?

    2. Is there a FPKM value above which a gene is up- or downregulated?

    3.I used excel and sorted the values from highest to smallest:
    assuming that control highest value is 200 and the correspondent
    treated values is 2, can I say that that gene is downregulated in the
    treated ssamples by a 100 fold chnage?

    4. Do I have to use at all the p_values given in the output to
    extrapolate the most up- or downregualted genes?

    I do not have yet cummerbund and I am not very good with R. And I 'm lost!

    Thanks,
    ib

  • #2
    Hi IBseq,

    Here are a few practical suggestions hopefully to get you started:

    1) Decide whether you need transcript-level or gene-level quantitation. It depends on what kind of biological questions you are trying to address. (cuffdiff gives both, just in case you want to know.)
    2) Please consider both fold change and p-value in deciding which genes/transcripts as most significantly changed for follow-up studies.
    3) Always use independent experiments to verify the differentially expressed genes. Statistics has it own limitations, and so are the technologies.
    4) For one specific question, yes, you may say that gene has 100-fold change. But be aware of the small numbers. The count of 2 is not very reliable. If the control has none and your experimental group has 1, mathematically, it is infinitely increase but in reality you cannot really tell.

    Good luck learning R!

    Douglas

    Comment


    • #3
      May please someone guide me for pathway analysis after cuffdiff events?
      I have some sig diff but I dont know how to do pathway analysis. Are there some commnads or rules something , a bit in detail, if somebody know?
      thank you

      Comment


      • #4
        You can run GSEA to identify enriched gene sets in (here you submit a matrix containing expression values for all genes in between your two conditions).
        If you want to study only the DEGs, then you can go for GO analysis.

        Comment

        Latest Articles

        Collapse

        • seqadmin
          Best Practices for Single-Cell Sequencing Analysis
          by seqadmin



          While isolating and preparing single cells for sequencing was historically the bottleneck, recent technological advancements have shifted the challenge to data analysis. This highlights the rapidly evolving nature of single-cell sequencing. The inherent complexity of single-cell analysis has intensified with the surge in data volume and the incorporation of diverse and more complex datasets. This article explores the challenges in analysis, examines common pitfalls, offers...
          Today, 07:15 AM
        • seqadmin
          Latest Developments in Precision Medicine
          by seqadmin



          Technological advances have led to drastic improvements in the field of precision medicine, enabling more personalized approaches to treatment. This article explores four leading groups that are overcoming many of the challenges of genomic profiling and precision medicine through their innovative platforms and technologies.

          Somatic Genomics
          “We have such a tremendous amount of genetic diversity that exists within each of us, and not just between us as individuals,”...
          05-24-2024, 01:16 PM

        ad_right_rmr

        Collapse

        News

        Collapse

        Topics Statistics Last Post
        Started by seqadmin, Today, 08:18 AM
        0 responses
        8 views
        0 likes
        Last Post seqadmin  
        Started by seqadmin, Today, 08:04 AM
        0 responses
        10 views
        0 likes
        Last Post seqadmin  
        Started by seqadmin, 06-03-2024, 06:55 AM
        0 responses
        13 views
        0 likes
        Last Post seqadmin  
        Started by seqadmin, 05-30-2024, 03:16 PM
        0 responses
        27 views
        0 likes
        Last Post seqadmin  
        Working...
        X