How To Get Full Information About Rna-Seq File?
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10.6 years ago
Y Tb ▴ 230

Dear All,

I am new in bioinformatics area, and I have some RNA-seq file for human tissues( liver, lung, and spleen) that I need to analyze them. I want to know how I can get full information about these files like: which technique that use to make the sequences (I mean illumina, solex,......etc) , how can I know if they single end or paired end , what are the first steps should I do for these files to start the analysis, Also I want to know if it specific strand or not (Note that I don't have any information about these data).

rna-seq • 4.3k views
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which type of data do you have? fastq? bam?

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I am sorry for send my comment here

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the data format is fastq.

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I would recommend you to visit a RNA-Seq data analysis workshop. There are several workshops available and it you will learn how the data formats look like and how you can analyze your data. You have to pay for these, but in the end you safe a lot of money and you can directly start your analysis.

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Some better tags might be useful above. "How", "to", "get" etc. are not useful.

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10.6 years ago
Michael 55k

There is a lot of information you cannot extract from the raw data files. If you want all information relevant for analyzing the data, you need either accompanying documentation or to ask the source directly, and they should give you documentation if you paid for the sequencing

From looking at the data you can see:

  • Base technology: Illumina vs. Solid vs. 454
  • Paired end or not (if paired end there are normally two files with R1, R2 for Illumina)

Important facts you can't know for sure:

  • The type of original sequence: RNA or DNA
  • The protocols used, e.g. TruSeq1,2,3, polyA-enrichment, total RNA, etc.
  • was the protocol strand-specifc (you might try to guess from analyzing the coverage)
  • adapter sequences used (mostly important for adapter trimming)
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Dear Michael, Thanks for helping me. I just contacted the person who sent me the data and he told me technology that used Illumina , and he sent me the adapter sequence and the following information

RNAseq libraries were prepared with the NEXTflex™ Directional RNA-Seq Kit, dUTP method ,and each library was quantitated by qPCR and sequenced on one lane 101 cycles on a HiSeq2000 using a TruSeq SBS sequencing kit version 3 and analyzed with Casava1.8.2.

I know that there are a secret information about how they process the data to get RNA-seq, but my question now how to get another information about the fastq file it self.

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In this concise sentence there is all information that is practically relevant and you need to know, so the person giving you that information did a good job. You can now use the adapter sequences with e.g. Trimmomatic and you know that the coverage is strand specific and can be used to e.g. identify overlapping antisense transcripts. What else do you want to know about the fastq?

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Thanks again Michael, how do you know the data is strand specific.

Do you have any idea about identify overlapping antisense transcripts. In addition, can I extract any other information from fastq file before starting my analysis.

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One idea is to run fastqc to check for the quality of the data

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Thanks Nicolas, I know that and I already used FastQC to check the quality of the sequences. But my question is if you look to the raw RNAseq file in fastqc (I mean the first line of each read and last line which is the quality score)can you get any other information.

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