Dear Biostars community,
I'm planning a RNA-sequencing experiment to detect tissue-dependent usage of exons (i.e. alternative splicing) in an insect species having a reference genome. I've isolated RNA from 4 different pools of each target tissue.
Now, I have to decide which is the most suitable sequencing strategy.
Looking at the bionformatic software available, it seem that even short reads with a low coverage can be processed to obtain alternative splicing events. But, theoretically, having longer reads and high coverage should be better, especially if using softwares which de novo reconstruct transcripts isoforms.
So, based on the software available and their performances, do you you think that 100PE (50M reads per sample, 200M if considering that I have 4 different samples per tissue) is enough? Or is it better to sequence longer reads?
Someone who has experience in the analysis of alternative splicing events can provide some suggestions, please?
Thank you in advance to who will be of help.
Best
Marianna
Thank you!
The genome size is low, 225 Mb. So I think 50M reads seems good enough.