Unconfigured Ad

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Light92
    Junior Member
    • Sep 2019
    • 5

    Molecular timetable method tools for circadian gene expression?

    Hello, good morning to everyone! As I stated in my previous question, I'm working on a time-point experiment about circadian gene expression in plants. You can find further details about the logic behind the experimental design in the thread I linked in the previous sentence. So, I looked the topic up in scientific literature and it looks as if the dominant method to analyze such kind of data is a logic named 'Molecular Timetable Method', first used back in 2004 on mice, but late adapted and used again on plants like in this article about tomato gene expression, which isn't the only one.

    However, while looking for specific bioinformatics methods (R packages, scripts, tools, etc), I was unable to find algorythms (JTK_Cycle, ABSR, GeneCycle, Circwave, RAIN etc), stating OPENLY they relied on this kind of approach.

    The articles themselves just describe the method and never expand on the bioinformatic tool (if any!) used to perform the analysis.

    I wonder if any of you has any experience in the field and can help me here to find a nice Molecular Timetable based tool to perform circadian gene expression analysis!

    Thank you in advance!

Latest Articles

Collapse

  • GATTACAT
    Reply to Nine Things a Sample Prep Scientist Thinks About Before Sequencing
    by GATTACAT
    Love this - good data definitely starts from good input, and poor input can only give relatively poor data. I particularly like the mention of Nanodrop/absorbance based methods for quantification. It's such a toss up if you'll get an accurate reading or what amounts to a randomly generated number, and a lot of library/sequencing related issues can be traced back to poor quant.
    07-01-2026, 11:43 AM
  • SEQadmin2
    Nine Things a Sample Prep Scientist Thinks About Before Sequencing
    by SEQadmin2


    I’m not a sequencing expert. I’m a purification scientist who uses NGS to evaluate workflows my group develops. With this perspective, we think about the sample first and the NGS workflow second. The sequencer is an exceptionally honest reporter, but it can only report on what you give it, so whether you get clean, interpretable data from an NGS workflow is largely determined before you begin.

    Here are nine questions we think about, in roughly the order they matter, before...
    06-18-2026, 07:11 AM

ad_right_rmr

Collapse

News

Collapse

Topics Statistics Last Post
Started by SEQadmin2, 07-02-2026, 11:08 AM
0 responses
25 views
0 reactions
Last Post SEQadmin2  
Started by SEQadmin2, 06-30-2026, 05:37 AM
0 responses
23 views
0 reactions
Last Post SEQadmin2  
Started by SEQadmin2, 06-26-2026, 11:10 AM
0 responses
23 views
0 reactions
Last Post SEQadmin2  
Started by SEQadmin2, 06-17-2026, 06:09 AM
0 responses
55 views
0 reactions
Last Post SEQadmin2  
Working...