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Novel approaches for bioinformatic analysis of salivary RNA sequencing data for development
- Kaczor-Urbanowicz, Karolina Elżbieta;
- Kim, Yong;
- Li, Feng;
- Galeev, Timur;
- Kitchen, Rob R;
- Gerstein, Mark;
- Koyano, Kikuye;
- Jeong, Sung-Hee;
- Wang, Xiaoyan;
- Elashoff, David;
- Kang, So Young;
- Kim, Su Mi;
- Kim, Kyoung;
- Kim, Sung;
- Chia, David;
- Xiao, Xinshu;
- Rozowsky, Joel;
- Wong, David TW
- Editor(s): Berger, Bonnie
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btx504Abstract
Motivation
Analysis of RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq) data in human saliva is challenging. Lack of standardization and unification of the bioinformatic procedures undermines saliva's diagnostic potential. Thus, it motivated us to perform this study.Results
We applied principal pipelines for bioinformatic analysis of small RNA-Seq data of saliva of 98 healthy Korean volunteers including either direct or indirect mapping of the reads to the human genome using Bowtie1. Analysis of alignments to exogenous genomes by another pipeline revealed that almost all of the reads map to bacterial genomes. Thus, salivary exRNA has fundamental properties that warrant the design of unique additional steps while performing the bioinformatic analysis. Our pipelines can serve as potential guidelines for processing of RNA-Seq data of human saliva.Availability and implementation
Processing and analysis results of the experimental data generated by the exceRpt (v4.6.3) small RNA-seq pipeline (github.gersteinlab.org/exceRpt) are available from exRNA atlas (exrna-atlas.org). Alignment to exogenous genomes and their quantification results were used in this paper for the analyses of small RNAs of exogenous origin.Contact
dtww@ucla.edu.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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