Identify the isoform of a transcript using RNA Seq data
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8.2 years ago

Hi,

my favorite transcript is supposed to consist of 12 exons (it was only described in germ cells, not in somatic tissues). Thus, I want to check what isoforms are actually expressed in my (somatic) tissue of interest.

I have paired-end RNA Seq data from a larger number of samples. I would like to use this dataset to shed light onto the isoform.

Thus far, I have aligned my reads using STAR, and counted exons using featureCounts. Seemingly, only a few exons are expressed, but quite consistent over all samples. There is no described isoform of the transcript that looks like what I have.

How would you suggest to go from here to obtain a consensus sequence? Do I need to assemble the whole transcriptome, or are there any shortcuts I can take, as I am only interested in a single transcript?

Many thanks!

RNA-Seq • 3.0k views
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8.2 years ago

I'd subset the alignments to contain only that regions and then run stringTie.

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That sounds like a great idea, many thanks, Devon!

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8.2 years ago
Manvendra Singh ★ 2.2k

Did you try running Cufflinks2 RABT assembly; I would suggest you to run in both mode; default and RABT and see if you can catch your desired isoform

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