note that the replicates are right on top of each other in the PCA plot. Are these technical or biological replicates?
The dispersion is calculated based on variance within conditions, so the dispersion is not necessarily large though you have large differences across conditions.
I'm not so familiar with microbial analysis. I'd guess, like others mentioned above, that you have many genes with counts for only one species. And there is not a clear group of genes which are not DE across the conditions. This makes normalization difficult, as the automatic methods within DESeq or edgeR are based on the assumption that there are enough genes that are not DE, such that robust measures like median or trimmed mean can find the center of the distribution of log ratios of samples.
Is there a set of genes that the biologists suspect might be equally expressed across the groups?
The dispersion is calculated based on variance within conditions, so the dispersion is not necessarily large though you have large differences across conditions.
I'm not so familiar with microbial analysis. I'd guess, like others mentioned above, that you have many genes with counts for only one species. And there is not a clear group of genes which are not DE across the conditions. This makes normalization difficult, as the automatic methods within DESeq or edgeR are based on the assumption that there are enough genes that are not DE, such that robust measures like median or trimmed mean can find the center of the distribution of log ratios of samples.
Is there a set of genes that the biologists suspect might be equally expressed across the groups?
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