edgeR: Value of variation of biological variation (BCV)
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KJ Lim ▴ 420
@kj-lim-5288
Last seen 4.3 years ago
Finland
Dear edgeR users and R community, I'm analysing a set of RNA-Seq data which has 2 different genotypes (treeHS, treeLS) and time of treatment (0H, 3H, 24H, 96H) with edgeR. After carried out estimating the common dispersion, the value of BCV for my RNA-Seq data was 0.428. > hl <- estimateGLMCommonDisp(hl, hl.design, verbose=TRUE) Disp = 0.18319 , BCV = 0.428 May I ask, it is common to see the value of variation of biological variation (BCV) as such? What this value can tells about the RNA-Seq data? I have these thoughts wondering me for a while. Forgive me if I have asked a stupid question. Thank you very much for your time. Have a nice weekend. Best regards, KJ Lim
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@gordon-smyth
Last seen 15 minutes ago
WEHI, Melbourne, Australia
See fourth paragraph of the Discussion of the edgeR glm paper: http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/content/40/10/4288.long Gordon > Date: Fri, 10 Aug 2012 11:45:31 +0300 > From: KJ Lim <jinkeanlim at="" gmail.com=""> > To: Bioconductor mailing list <bioconductor at="" r-project.org=""> > Subject: [BioC] edgeR: Value of variation of biological variation (BCV) > > Dear edgeR users and R community, > > I'm analysing a set of RNA-Seq data which has 2 different genotypes > (treeHS, treeLS) and time of treatment (0H, 3H, 24H, 96H) with edgeR. > > After carried out estimating the common dispersion, the value of BCV > for my RNA-Seq data was 0.428. > > hl <- estimateGLMCommonDisp(hl, hl.design, verbose=TRUE) > Disp = 0.18319 , BCV = 0.428 > > May I ask, it is common to see the value of variation of biological > variation (BCV) as such? What this value can tells about the RNA-Seq > data? I have these thoughts wondering me for a while. Forgive me if I > have asked a stupid question. > > Thank you very much for your time. > > Have a nice weekend. > > Best regards, > KJ Lim > ______________________________________________________________________ The information in this email is confidential and intend...{{dropped:4}}
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Dear Prof Gordon, Thanks for your prompt replied. I will read through the paper. Have a nice weekend. Best regards, KJ Lim On 11 August 2012 04:40, Gordon K Smyth <smyth at="" wehi.edu.au=""> wrote: > See fourth paragraph of the Discussion of the edgeR glm paper: > > http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/content/40/10/4288.long > > Gordon > >> Date: Fri, 10 Aug 2012 11:45:31 +0300 >> From: KJ Lim <jinkeanlim at="" gmail.com=""> >> To: Bioconductor mailing list <bioconductor at="" r-project.org=""> >> Subject: [BioC] edgeR: Value of variation of biological variation (BCV) >> >> Dear edgeR users and R community, >> >> I'm analysing a set of RNA-Seq data which has 2 different genotypes >> (treeHS, treeLS) and time of treatment (0H, 3H, 24H, 96H) with edgeR. >> >> After carried out estimating the common dispersion, the value of BCV >> for my RNA-Seq data was 0.428. >> > hl <- estimateGLMCommonDisp(hl, hl.design, verbose=TRUE) >> Disp = 0.18319 , BCV = 0.428 >> >> May I ask, it is common to see the value of variation of biological >> variation (BCV) as such? What this value can tells about the RNA- Seq >> data? I have these thoughts wondering me for a while. Forgive me if I >> have asked a stupid question. >> >> Thank you very much for your time. >> >> Have a nice weekend. >> >> Best regards, >> KJ Lim >> > > ______________________________________________________________________ > The information in this email is confidential and inte...{{dropped:6}}
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Hi, I had a related question regarding BCV, it has been my recent experience that working in vivo with heterogeneous tissues such as brain yields a much higher BCV than 10%, usually close to 30% even though I am working with genetically identical organisms (mice, all males as well). Is that your observation as well, or does this mean that variation is being introduced at some of the sample processing steps? I do not have technical replicates, although I have n=5 biological replicates for each of my conditions Interestingly, filtering out low count reads does not seem to lower the average BCV much thanks very much for your answer Lucia On Fri, Aug 10, 2012 at 9:40 PM, Gordon K Smyth <smyth@wehi.edu.au> wrote: > See fourth paragraph of the Discussion of the edgeR glm paper: > > http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/**content/40/10/4288.long<http: nar.o="" xfordjournals.org="" content="" 40="" 10="" 4288.long=""> > > Gordon > > Date: Fri, 10 Aug 2012 11:45:31 +0300 >> From: KJ Lim <jinkeanlim@gmail.com> >> To: Bioconductor mailing list <bioconductor@r-project.org> >> Subject: [BioC] edgeR: Value of variation of biological variation (BCV) >> >> Dear edgeR users and R community, >> >> I'm analysing a set of RNA-Seq data which has 2 different genotypes >> (treeHS, treeLS) and time of treatment (0H, 3H, 24H, 96H) with edgeR. >> >> After carried out estimating the common dispersion, the value of BCV >> for my RNA-Seq data was 0.428. >> > hl <- estimateGLMCommonDisp(hl, hl.design, verbose=TRUE) >> Disp = 0.18319 , BCV = 0.428 >> >> May I ask, it is common to see the value of variation of biological >> variation (BCV) as such? What this value can tells about the RNA- Seq >> data? I have these thoughts wondering me for a while. Forgive me if I >> have asked a stupid question. >> >> Thank you very much for your time. >> >> Have a nice weekend. >> >> Best regards, >> KJ Lim >> >> > ______________________________**______________________________**____ ______ > The information in this email is confidential and inte...{{dropped:13}}
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Dear Lucia, I don't have yet any experience with working with in-house generated RNA-seq data from brain tissue, so I can't say, but I think I would be looking for what sources of variation can be controlled in a case such as yours. When we have had larger BCV from mouse experiments, we've been able to track the cause down to sex differences or batch effects or RNA contamination. I have analysed mouse brain tissue using microarrays, and found that it was important to control for exactly what aspect of the brain was being sampled. See Achtman et al (Science Translational Medicine, 23 May 2012) for such an analysis. I have noticed that many of the data sets published as examples in statistical papers on differential expression for RNA-seq show very much larger BCV than I would be happy to have from our in-house controlled mouse experiments. Whether that reflects innate variability or something else I don't know. Best wishes Gordon --------------------------------------------- Professor Gordon K Smyth, Bioinformatics Division, Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, 1G Royal Parade, Parkville, Vic 3052, Australia. http://www.statsci.org/smyth On Mon, 13 Aug 2012, Lucia Peixoto wrote: > Hi, > I had a related question regarding BCV, it has been my recent experience > that working in vivo with heterogeneous tissues such as brain yields a much > higher BCV than 10%, usually close to 30% > even though I am working with genetically identical organisms (mice, all > males as well). > Is that your observation as well, or does this mean that variation is being > introduced at some of the sample processing steps? > I do not have technical replicates, although I have n=5 biological > replicates for each of my conditions > Interestingly, filtering out low count reads does not seem to lower the > average BCV much > > thanks very much for your answer > > Lucia > > > On Fri, Aug 10, 2012 at 9:40 PM, Gordon K Smyth <smyth at="" wehi.edu.au=""> wrote: > >> See fourth paragraph of the Discussion of the edgeR glm paper: >> >> http://nar.oxfordjournals.org/**content/40/10/4288.long<http: nar.="" oxfordjournals.org="" content="" 40="" 10="" 4288.long=""> >> >> Gordon >> >> Date: Fri, 10 Aug 2012 11:45:31 +0300 >>> From: KJ Lim <jinkeanlim at="" gmail.com=""> >>> To: Bioconductor mailing list <bioconductor at="" r-project.org=""> >>> Subject: [BioC] edgeR: Value of variation of biological variation (BCV) >>> >>> Dear edgeR users and R community, >>> >>> I'm analysing a set of RNA-Seq data which has 2 different genotypes >>> (treeHS, treeLS) and time of treatment (0H, 3H, 24H, 96H) with edgeR. >>> >>> After carried out estimating the common dispersion, the value of BCV >>> for my RNA-Seq data was 0.428. >>> > hl <- estimateGLMCommonDisp(hl, hl.design, verbose=TRUE) >>> Disp = 0.18319 , BCV = 0.428 >>> >>> May I ask, it is common to see the value of variation of biological >>> variation (BCV) as such? What this value can tells about the RNA- Seq >>> data? I have these thoughts wondering me for a while. Forgive me if I >>> have asked a stupid question. >>> >>> Thank you very much for your time. >>> >>> Have a nice weekend. >>> >>> Best regards, >>> KJ Lim >>> >>> >> ______________________________**______________________________**___ _______ >> The information in this email is confidential and intend...{{dropped:4}} >> >> ______________________________**_________________ >> Bioconductor mailing list >> Bioconductor at r-project.org >> https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/**listinfo/bioconductor<https: stat.e="" thz.ch="" mailman="" listinfo="" bioconductor=""> >> Search the archives: http://news.gmane.org/gmane.** >> science.biology.informatics.**conductor<http: news.gmane.org="" gmane="" .science.biology.informatics.conductor=""> >> > ______________________________________________________________________ The information in this email is confidential and intend...{{dropped:4}}
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