Seqanswers Leaderboard Ad

Collapse

Announcement

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

  • Contamination in my sample?

    Hi all!

    I just ran a 100bp PE human exome seq run in my lab and was looking at the fastqc results of my run. I am getting this weird pattern in the gc content distribution and was wondering is this normal for an exome run or do i have some sort of contamination? I've run an exome seq before in my lab but saw a distribution which was similar to the theoretical distribution with a shorter peak (yet, still normally distributed). The 2 peaks i'm seeing in the new run is really messing with my head as i have 24 samples all showing the same pattern!

    Thanks in advance!

  • #2
    i don't know why the image is not being shown in the post... here's the link

    Comment


    • #3
      this may help http://www.bioinformatics.babraham.a.../fastq_screen/

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by JackieBadger View Post
        so i tried this with a couple of my samples vs human.... i'm getting only 3% not mapping. So there is either very little or no contamination in my sample. So then what can explain the bimodal gc content distro?

        Comment


        • #5
          bump

          Comment


          • #6
            I've just got exactly the same with my data. What kit did you use for capture?

            Cheers

            Kath

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Kath View Post
              I've just got exactly the same with my data. What kit did you use for capture?

              Cheers

              Kath
              TruSeq exome capture.... FYI we saw it in rna seq data also!

              Comment

              Latest Articles

              Collapse

              • seqadmin
                Understanding Genetic Influence on Infectious Disease
                by seqadmin




                During the COVID-19 pandemic, scientists observed that while some individuals experienced severe illness when infected with SARS-CoV-2, others were barely affected. These disparities left researchers and clinicians wondering what causes the wide variations in response to viral infections and what role genetics plays.

                Jean-Laurent Casanova, M.D., Ph.D., Professor at Rockefeller University, is a leading expert in this crossover between genetics and infectious...
                09-09-2024, 10:59 AM
              • seqadmin
                Addressing Off-Target Effects in CRISPR Technologies
                by seqadmin






                The first FDA-approved CRISPR-based therapy marked the transition of therapeutic gene editing from a dream to reality1. CRISPR technologies have streamlined gene editing, and CRISPR screens have become an important approach for identifying genes involved in disease processes2. This technique introduces targeted mutations across numerous genes, enabling large-scale identification of gene functions, interactions, and pathways3. Identifying the full range...
                08-27-2024, 04:44 AM

              ad_right_rmr

              Collapse

              News

              Collapse

              Topics Statistics Last Post
              Started by seqadmin, Today, 06:25 AM
              0 responses
              13 views
              0 likes
              Last Post seqadmin  
              Started by seqadmin, Yesterday, 01:02 PM
              0 responses
              12 views
              0 likes
              Last Post seqadmin  
              Started by seqadmin, 09-18-2024, 06:39 AM
              0 responses
              14 views
              0 likes
              Last Post seqadmin  
              Started by seqadmin, 09-11-2024, 02:44 PM
              0 responses
              14 views
              0 likes
              Last Post seqadmin  
              Working...
              X