Seminar by Terry Speed on Fri 7 March 2014: "Normalization of RNA-Seq Data: Are the ERCC Spike-In Controls Reliable ?"

Terry Speed from the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute, Melbourne, AUS and the University of California, Berkeley, USA, will talk about: "Normalization of RNA-Seq Data: Are the ERCC Spike-In Controls Reliable?" Friday, March 7th, 2014 at 11:00 Génopode Auditorium B (UNIL, Dorigny campus) Abstract: Joint work with Sandrine Dudoit, Davide Risso and John Ngai, all from UC Berkeley. The External RNA Control Consortium (ERCC) developed a set of 92 synthetic polyadenylated RNA standards that mimic natural eukaryotic mRNA (Jiang et al., 2011). The standards are designed to have a wide range of lengths (250-2,000 nucleotides) and GC-contents (5-51%). The ERCC standards can be spiked into RNA at various concentrations prior to the library preparation step and serve as negative and positive controls in RNA-Seq. Ambion commercializes spike-in control mixes, ERCC ExFold RNA Spike-in Control Mix 1 and 2, each containing the same set of 92 standards, but at different concentrations. We investigate the use of the ERCC spike-in controls for two main purposes: (a) Quality assessment/quality control (QA/QC) of RNA-Seq data and benchmarking of normalization and differential expression (DE) methods, and (b) Direct inclusion in between-sample normalization procedures. We have two RNA-seq data sets which make use of the ERCC controls: a local one concerning treated and untreated zebrafish tissue, and some of the SEQC samples. A variety of normalization methods will be compared, both using and not using the ERCC controls.
participants (1)
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Frédéric Schütz