How to see if DEGs are grouped in genome?
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8.6 years ago
Parham ★ 1.6k

Hi,

In my experiment I compromise replication and transcription, then look into transcriptome for changes.

One thing that I would like to investigate is if the DEGs are significantly grouped in close-by loci through out genome or they are just scattered out in a random manner?

I would like to have your feedback on how to approach this question and which packages do you recommend?

I prefer to work under R environment if that's possible. The organism that I work on is S. pombe. Let me know if you need more information.

Thanks in advance,
Parham

overlap DEG rna-seq • 1.4k views
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Well, depends on how many genes you got. If you are using cufflinks, it tells you the genomic chromosome/scaffold as well as nucleotide range the DEG is located on, so if you look at the DEGs you may visually be able to tell how close they are.

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I was previously using cufflinks but then I switched to STAR and DESeq2 for the purpose. I will look into that. Thanks!

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Another idea is to export your annotation in BED, and then just write a quick grep script that will pull out the positions of the DEGs.

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8.6 years ago
Christian ★ 3.0k
I ended up using the Perl script from de Preter et al. (2008), which worked quite nicely: Recommended tools for positional gene enrichment (PGE) analysis?
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Yeah that looks convenient. However they don't have fission yeast genome in their data base unfortunately. Thanks for recommending though!

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