A Simple Question On Rna-Seq Terminology
1
1
Entering edit mode
11.5 years ago
alittleboy ▴ 220

This question may be very simple and basic, but I just need to confirm that I understand the differences among those terminologies in the RNA-Seq context. Suppose I have a sample called SLR, and it is sequenced on 5 lanes, so I have (among other output files) BAM files like L1_SLR, L2_SLR, L3_SLR, L5_SLR and L7_SLR.bam. Here, the letter "L" denotes "lanes". In a typical RNA-Seq experiment, we should expect that reads from those 5 lanes have little variations, right? I am confused with the term "technical replicates" and the "lanes" here -- they're not the same, right? Also, I think these 5 lanes constitute a single "library", that is, one sample corresponds to one library. Am I right? That confused me because I once saw that each library corresponds to a technical replicate (e.g. mutant condition sample having 3 technical replicates, so it has 3 libraries; wild condition sample having 3 technical replicates, so a total of 6 libraries for the expriment). Thank you so much for your clarifications!

rna-seq library • 4.5k views
ADD COMMENT
5
Entering edit mode
11.5 years ago
JC 13k

A technical replicate is a single sample that is sequence again, Illumina's machines have 8 lanes to produce sequences, but each lane can hold more than one sample if required. Check this simple explanation here http://euler.bc.edu/marthlab/scotty/help.html

ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode

thanks for the comments -- so in my situation, will the 5 lanes represent the 5 technical replicates? I am pretty sure that they come from the same sample, i.e. a sample that was sequenced on 5 different lanes. Also, how about the term "library"?

ADD REPLY
3
Entering edit mode

They way you are describing your experiment, I do not think that the 5 lines are technical replicates. The page JC linked to is spot on. For the 5 lanes to be technical replicates, five separate aliquots "from the same solution" would have been extracted and prepared into a library independently of each other. If, however, a large aliquot was extracted and used to prepare a single library, which was then spread across five lanes, I would not call that a technical replicate.

I actually think your original interpretation of how you understand the terminology is correct, keeping in mind what JC pointed out that one lane can actually contain more than one sample/library through a technique called multiplexing so knowledge of the lane the data was captured from may not tell you much about the nature of the data itself.

ADD REPLY
2
Entering edit mode

"will the 5 lanes represent the 5 technical replicates?" Possibly. "how about the term "library?" Library preparation is the process by which the RNA is fragmented and adapters are added so that it's ready for sequencing.

ADD REPLY

Login before adding your answer.

Traffic: 2223 users visited in the last hour
Help About
FAQ
Access RSS
API
Stats

Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy.

Powered by the version 2.3.6