Hello everyone!
I conducted a differential gene expression analysis on a RNA-seq dataset to evaluate the alterations coming from the knockout of only one protein coding gene (comparison = knockout versus wildtype). Of a total of 88 upregulated genes, 73 are located on the same chromosome. I have already looked at the positions of the upregulated genes inside the chromosome and they are spread through all the chromosome. Besides, I checked for their functions and they don't seem to be functionally related. One possible explanation could be an extra copy of the chromosome (as the organism presents aneuploidy), but this is not an usual chromosome known to deviate from the diploid pattern. I'm waiting for a wet lab experiment to check ploidy anyway.
But, I would like to know if it could it be an artifact? If so, how can I check it?
Thank you!
you expect to have aneuploidy only in the knockout?
It could be possible to observe an extra copy only in the knockout, it's a (pathogenic) plastic microorganism. But it's unlikely to happen in this case because we also have the add-back of the gene, which was made upon the knockout, and we didn't observe enrichment for that chromosome when comparing add-back versus wildtype. Thus, the extra copy would be gained in the knockout and lost in the add-back. I'll have an answer for this question in a while as we will run an experiment to check the number of copies of the chromosome in the knockout.