Hi there, the closest post related to my questions can be found here.
Long time reader, first time poster.
I have been looking into RNA-Seq and at data where I would like to identify differential transcript abundance between two samples that may or may not have been prepared in the same experimental run. For example public RNA-Seq data compared to our own in-house generated RNA-Seq data.
Can they be compared? The more I look into this the more I am finding that the answer is, no.
So the next question is, can one design an experiment to be able to do this? What I am talking about here is a universal reference such as ERCC spike in or a universal reference sample that is sequenced in every experimental run.
Would love to hear of tips and insights on both these queries.
Cheers
For RNA Seq, my two cent is that you should have no problem comparing them if you are sure that the two samples are of similar time point and condition and that they are extract in similar ways. If you have the raw data (e.g. reads) instead of the RPKM, then it should be fine?
ERCC is good but I currently feel like it is better for single cell RNA Seq when it come to normalization. Otherwise, it seems to act better as a quality control. Other people might be able to give you clearer insight into this question...