I'm an undergrad taking a genomics course where I'm doing a mini research project on a gene (APOE). For one of my hypothesis, I would like to compare the expression of APOE between different organisms and see what the differences are and if it is significant. Eventually I want to also compare the folding as well and see what the differences in the transport functions are. I'm lacking in the genetics and genomics subject (and really regretting taking this course) so I'm a bit unsure of how to execute this and obtain this data?
My thoughts were to possibly obtain the cDNA (humans) and run a BLAST (blastx?) against the other organisms and compare the values from there? I'm not really sure though if this is correct and what values would be significant for what I'm looking for (query?).
If anyone knows anything about this, please give some guidance! Anything at all will help, even literature recommendations on something similar to what I am doing would be tremendous help!
One tip - " ask questions!! ". I strongly suggest to talk to your supervisor and understand the project. Ask questions, ask often, ask questions that you think are "stupid" (asking stupid questions is a wise man's approach). Ask until the picture is clear, set small goals at first, break the task, seek help but explore on your own.
Apologies in advance if this following advice is going to sound pessimistic but you are proposing fairly difficult projects.
If you do find expression data for APOE comparing it across organisms is like comparing orange to apples. You could do it but I am not sure if the results would tell you anything useful.
How are you planning to do this? Protein folding is not the easiest of the topics and how it may affect transport would be even more challenging.
Are you thinking about finding possible changes in amino acids (rather than actual expression) to see how the gene may have evolved over time in different organism? This aspect may be doable.
This is an option of an approach I wanted to take however I really have no idea how to approach it. I also thought it may have been more difficult, but taking your advice into consideration I'll definitely see if I can try that instead if it is more doable. I went on UniProt and did a sequence alignment to compare active sites. Would this data be relevant?
Thank you so much for your response!
What's the hypothesis, then? :-)