Good evening,
I followed the tuxedo protocol as described here. With the "normal" outputs that cufflinks provide (I'm searching on cuffdiff output files, but tell me if I'm wrong), how could I determine which of isoforms detected are actually novel ones?
I'm pretty new on this field, and I've found in many posts that using Cufflinks is the answer to find novel isoforms, or differential splicing too. Now that I followed up the "instructions" I'm stuck on trying to interpret the results, after searching all over I could. Searching on cufflinks manual didn't help me either. :/
Can someone explain me or provide me some tutorials/papers/etc, that might help me on this topic please?
Thanks in advance.
I have done this by running cufflinks with no annotation, then using bedtools to basically remove all the regions that intersect with known genes... Or if you're interested in antisense transcription, look for transcripts on the opposite strand from known genes. Then apply some filters on length and rpkm and come up with a set of putative novel transcripts. Hopefully followed up by some kind of lab based verification, because I feel like this is all pretty hazy and based on thresholds. This may not be the right way to do it, but it seemed to make sense to me at the time.