Hi there,
I'm faceting a vital dilemma and I'd need some advices, please. Up to now, I've processed some samples according a 3`-based RNAseq protocol... but currently I have the option to process the new ones with a full-length protocol (that will give me, theoretically, more information).
I guess, according the paper I attached, it's not feasible (or correct) to directly compare the final matrix counts... so I should realign my BAMs to a custom reference containing only the 3' ends for each gene. Do you know if there's already any way to do this? Or there is any study that have already done this? (I've found nothing).
Beyond technical aspects, what's your view about using two different (very different) protocols? Maybe could be better to use the same for the entire project?
Thanks a a lot. Bests.
To clarify, it can be done you could attempt batch effect correction assuming you have comparable time points/experimental replicates. Would I recommend it? Absolutely not, as others mention below the headache involved in de-convoluting the technical effects from real biological effects would be not worth it at all. A major question is: why do you suddenly want more information? If you are simply repeating the same experiment with full-length transcript information to investigate alternative splicing or alternative promoter usage then analyzing the two datasets separately (3' vs full-length) and then comparing them is totally OK. Merging them together for analysis like DEG would not be fun.
Thanks for your reply. How would you compare two different analysis?