Hi all,
This is as much an experimental design question as a bioinformatic one, but it's something many of doing RNA-seq analysis deal with, so I thought I'd ask here.
I'm looking to compare enrichment of genes in a GFP-labelled set of neurons in mouse. A colleague recommended that as the comparison, we use total cells (GFP+ and GFP-) from the same animals (3 animals). I said we should collect total cells from separate animals (an additional 3 animals). My reasoning is that taking cells from the same animals would constitute pseudoreplication, since the biological units are not really different. It's the same animal. So in my final DE analysis, I couldn't say that n=3 for GFP+ and n=3 for total (GFP+ and GFP-), since I sampled only from the same animals. But if I sample from different animals, then it really is n=3.
What do you think?
Please use
ADD COMMENT/ADD REPLY
when responding to existing posts to keep threads logically organized.This entire section should have gone under @Devon's answer.
Sounds like you need a generic neuronal nuclear marker (truth be told, I'm still hesitant about reading too much into nuclear RNA, especially in neurons). I've never looked for one, but I wonder if Stefan Bonn's group has one since they have a LOT of experience sequencing from neuronal nuclei.