Hello everyone!
I want to run a RNAseq experiment with 18 samples, which have 3 replicates each (total of 54 RNA libraries). We have two flowcells available: one can fit 20 libraries and the other can fit 40.
We were wondering about how to better distribute the replicates libraries in these flowcells in order to correct for batch effect during the differential expression analysis with DESeq2. We are considering putting 1 library from all samples in the first flowcell and 2 libraries in the second, but we have not found good references about this particular question in experimental design. We have other options like running 6 samples (x3 replicates) first and 12 samples (3x replicates) second, or any combination of samples.
Therefore, the question. How to better distribute my replicates between two batches of bulk RNAseq? Additionally, is DESeq2 able to collapse replicates and account for batch effect in the same experiment?
I guess I forgot to mention one detail. We have run these samples previously and we had gDNA contamination. The idea is to sequence first 20 libraries (we have a number of desired reads, that's why we set this max number), see whether we managed to remove the contamination, then proceed to sequence their replicates. Do you have any suggestion in this context?
I don't see why you couldn't pool them all and check them all, then run them all again to get up to the right number of reads.
This sound like more of a job for a MiSeq, then you run your samples for real on something bigger, like a NextSeq or a NovaSeq.
Depending on what you did to address that there is a chance that this manipulation is going to introduce some batch effect for these 20 samples.
Ideally you should have simply sequenced more of the original libraries (assuming all samples were identically processed at the same time and only a few ended up with the gDNA?).
Thank you a lot for your help!
The original libraries were very contamined, there is no way to use them, but I like your idea to create one large pool. I will discuss this with the wet lab.