Entering edit mode
3.5 years ago
alexia.260883
•
0
Excuse me, I have some questions,
If I have units (TPM +0.001), who is taken as 0 or 1 as the cut-off point.
I am analyzing the expression of a gene (normal vs cancer). But I have very negative values with the units (TPM +0.001). I don't know if the 1 or 0 reference should be taken. How should it be interpreted? Can you guide me, please. Thank you
You are excused - do not worry.
Can you let us know which data you have retrieved? If you have negative values, then, perhaps, the data that you have is, in fact,
log2(TPM + 0.001)
orlog(TPM + 0.001)
. It will greatly help us to know the source of this data, though.Unit: log2(tpm+0.001).
RNAseq - RSEM tpm.
Thanks. It then makes sense that there are negative values. for example, if
TPM = 0
, then:What would you like to do with this data? Can you describe further the files that you have retrieved?
I want to compare the expression level of mRNA isoforms of a gen, between normal tissue and cancer
I have many tados with this value -9.96, but I don't know if they are zeros
If it says that a .001 pseudocount was added, and the logged value is consistent with taking the log of the pseudocount alone, yes, they were zeros initially.
Take the data from a database called XENA, the expression comes in log2 (tpm + 0.001). But I don't know what the cut-off point is to say if the expression increases or decreases. I don't know what it means -9.965784.
Excuse me, I'm a student and I know the subject well.
There is no "cut-off". RNAseq is a relative experiment where you can compare expression between two conditions after accounting for various covariates.
What you did do finally? I had a similar problem and finally removed all such entries because It was screwing my box plot.