Dear all, We plan to conduct a population-based study with the main method being transcriptomic analysis of human peripheral blood.
Would the stability of the transcriptome be affected by factors such as physical activity, diet, pathological conditions, and environmental factors?
If this is indeed the case, are there any feasible solutions available? If this problem cannot be resolved, is it even necessary to conduct transcriptomic analysis?
Are there any omics fields, such as genomics, transcriptomics, metabolomics, epigenomics, proteomics, gut microbiomics, single-cell omics, immunomics, and peptidomics, that may be less influenced by factors such as physical activity, diet, pathological conditions, environmental factors, among others?
Thank you for your help!
This is such a fundamentally great question that many folks don't even think to ask.
The very fact that you think deeply enough about this shows that you're trying to be systematic.
It most definitely does have an effect.
The best way I can think to control for this is to literally CONTROL or, if the aforementioned is not possible, RECORD all these different metrics to be used as covariates.
Thank you, we are also learning and exploring through communication with you and other knowledgeable researchers, represented by you, hoping to make progress.
The two methods you mentioned: literally CONTROL and RECORD all these different metrics to be used as covariates, are very inspiring. In addition, we have also seen some literature such as: Bowyer JF, Tranter KM, Hanig JP, et al (2015) Evaluating the Stability of RNA-Seq Transcriptome Profiles and Drug-Induced Immune-Related Expression Changes in Whole Blood. PLoS ONE 10(7): e0133315. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0133315.
Unfortunately, this paper also does not provide a clear discussion on the mentioned issues. Do you have any recommended literature that discusses or researches the above issues? Thank you.
Sadly nothing that I know of.