Very Large Fpkm Values For Some Transcripts: Artifacts?
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12.9 years ago
Pfs ▴ 580

I use cufflinks to analyze a ~ 135 million reads experiments. The FPKM values vary from 0 to 100000. I did not use the -N option that sometimes can produce inflated FPKM, so I investigated some of the very large FPKM values.

The generally are associated with non-coding protein genes and have length approx 100. The number of alignments covering the regions are approx 3000.

Using the RPKm formula I cannot make sense of the large FPKM values.

Any explanation? Are these artifacts? If so, how can they be detected and filtered out?

fpkm rna • 6.0k views
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Have you tried writing the authors (i.e. Cole)? Typically they are responsive. Of course, if they were to respond we'd love to see the answer.

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If you're generally trying to quantify the abundance of a number of short transcripts, you might also try passing cufflinks the --no-effective-length-correction flag.

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12.8 years ago

I'm not sure if your FPKM values are being calculated correctly but from looking at a lot of RNA-seq data I would say it is normal to have some very highly expressed, short, non-coding transcripts (e.g., rRNA genes).

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12.7 years ago
Mkd • 0

It also depends on the tissue. Some have extremely high levels of a few mRNAs such as lens and developing RBC.

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12.7 years ago

This has been observed by many users. Read, for example, this SeqAnswers thread, where Cole Trapnell also makes an appearance.

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12.7 years ago
Stevelor ▴ 310

It depends on the samples....as already said it might come from rRNA...or what we observed in one of our last sequencing runs was that the Globin genes where highly expressed cause it was an whole blood sample. About 90% of all reads belong to these few globin genes....[?] So think about your sample and what kind of genes could be very higly expressed!

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