I'm a freshman in bioinformatics, and when I do the RNA-seq data analysis I found many miRNA or noncoding RNA in my results, why?
I'm a freshman in bioinformatics, and when I do the RNA-seq data analysis I found many miRNA or noncoding RNA in my results, why?
This is not really a bioinformatics question but a sequencing protocol question, maybe better asked giving more details on seqanswers. But the short answer is: most likely because they are there.
RNA-seq protocols targeted at eukaryote mRNA include steps to deplete ribosomal RNA, or fish only mRNA with polyA tail. But none of these protocols is 100% efficient.
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Please try to be more specific: "the RNA-seq data analysis" and "many miRNA" is about zero information to deal with. Also, why would it bother you? Is your aim to improve your RNA-seq protocol?