I want to ask a question about using rnaseq to detect allele.
We only have rnaseq in sample A and B, but we don't have WGS or exomeseq on that samples.
So Is that possible for us to detect allele-specific expression in sample A or B? Can we use hg19 genome reference to be a reference to filter the SNP in genome?
Thanks a lot!!!
This is really a much better answer than mine.
Thanks so much Chris, so far we only have rnaseq data and can't have DNAseq in recent future. So if I compare allele across samples, can it be explained while there only have A in sample x, but only have C in sample y?
Depends on your samples. If this was an extremely inbred mouse strain, then you might be able to say with some confidence that the reference strain has an AC at this position, so observing only A is likely to be due to skewed expression and not a mutation. In humans, you might also be able to look at allele frequencies from dbSNP or 1000 genomes to get an idea of how often you see A and C in the population. To be completely sure that you're seeing an RNA-level skew, though, you really need to know what the alleles are in the DNA.
Got it. Thanks a lot!