Systematic assessment of next-generation sequencing for quantitative small RNA profiling: synthetic ratiometric pools
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ABSTRACT: Small RNA-seq is increasingly being used for profiling of small RNAs. Quantitative characteristics of long RNA-seq have been extensively described, but small RNA-seq involves fundamentally different methods for library preparation, with distinct protocols and technical variations that have not been fully and systematically studied. Using common sets of reference samples, we evaluated the accuracy, reproducibility and bias of small RNA-seq library preparation for five distinct protocols and across nine different laboratories. As part of this larger study, we assessed reproducibility and accuracy of relative expression measurements using two pools of synthetic small RNA sequences, where subsets of the sRNAs vary in relative amount between pools A and B. The pools each contain 334 small RNAs, varying by 15 different ratios between pools A and B (10:1, 8:1, 5:1, 4:1, 3:1, 2:1, 1.5:1, 1:1, 1:1.5, 1:2, 1:3, 1:4 1:5, 1:8, 1:10). We find that although the sequencing bias varies extensively between protocols, the relative abundance measured between samples A and B is largely reproducible and accurate across labs and protocols. These results suggest that measurements of differential expression should be comparable across institutions and library preparation technologies.
ORGANISM(S): synthetic construct
PROVIDER: GSE94585 | GEO | 2018/07/09
REPOSITORIES: GEO
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