Entering edit mode
António Miguel de Jesus Domingues
▴
510
@antonio-miguel-de-jesus-domingues-5182
Last seen 10 months ago
Germany
Dear Alejandro,
I just wanted to follow up on this to say that I also see quite a big
difference between the "new" and old "DEXseq". Not only are the
numbers
of differentially expressed exons much larger in the new version (in
one
experiment they nearly quadrupled), the direction of change is now
shifted. That is, when upon knock-down there was about 50% more exon
exclusion then inclusion, now is the other way around. It does not
happen in all my knockdowns (and I have seven of them) but it is
sufficient to me wary of previous conclusions based on the old
version.
As before, DEXSeq was run with the default options. Perhaps my
experimental design is not the best to make a conclusion on how much
different the results are between the 2 versions of DEXSeq (only 2
biological replicates per condition), but other users should bare in
mind that some changes in results might happen.
Regarding my experimental design, I am building the DEXSeqDataSet
object
with only 2 conditions (4 samples) to do the pairwise comparisons.
Since I have a control and 7 conditions, is it possible, similarly to
DESeq2, to build the object, estimate the dispersion, and do the
comparisons with all the samples and then only extract the results of
the comparisons of interest? And if so, does it offer an statistical
advantage? My gut feeling says yes but it says many wrong things all
time :) (I am attaching a dispersion plot from on comparison for
DEXSeq
1.10, sessionInfo is at the bottom of the email)
On a matter of packages changes, and I put this question to discussion
on the list, where should the threshold be for a change in a package
to
warrant also a change in name? Changes in function wrappers, bug
corrections are all fine, but when the results stop being reproducible
(and not due to bug fixing), should it be time to think about it? We
have seen it happening with DESeq which after major changes became
DESeq2. This is not a dig at you, just genuine curiosity, and concern
as
user.
Best,
Ant?nio
> Dear Marco Marconi,
>
> I think that was the version where we changed from our original
method,
> the one described on the paper to the recent apporach, you fill find
> this details in the section "Methodological changes since
publication of
> the paper". As you might have noticed, the dispersions are very
> correlated as well as the p-values.
>
> I don't think the change in the p-value, and therefore the
p-adjusted
> value, since it is not changing dramatically. The simplest thing
would
> be to increase your FDR threshold a bit.
>
> Best regards,
> Alejandro
>
> >/ Hello, After performing a general Bioconductor update to the new
version, I
> />/ noticed that now the DEXseq package 1.8.0 is giving me
different results
> />/ from prrevious version 1.6.0. As a start, its function print
dots "..." on
> />/ the stdout which was not done in the previous version. This is
not a big
> />/ issue, the problem is that now I am obtaining different
results. Generally,
> />/ the padjust values are bigger.
> />/
> />/ For example this exon:
> />/
> />/ a1 a2 a3 b1 b2
b3
> />/ EXXXX 126 90 101 81 233 225
> />/
> />/ gets different results:
> />/
> />/ geneID,exonID,dispersion,pvalue,padjust,meanBase,log2fold(b/a)
> />/
> />/ old version:
> />/ EXXXX,0.0684906370633231,0.00256847378387803,0.0321347815544768
,129.941383199307,-0.217272839643456
> />/
> />/ new version:
> />/ EXXXX,0.0928452378435829,0.00401881761350959,0.0587521235795571
,129.941383199307,-0.213275654796358
> />/
> />/
> />/ as you can see the old one has a padjust below 0.05 and the
other above
> />/ 0.05, which is a big problem.
> />/
> />/
> />/ I had a look in the NEWS section of the DEXSeq package, but i
couldn't find
> />/ any information about major changes.
> />/
> />/
> />/ thank you very much, regards,
> />
sessionInfo()
R version 3.1.1 (2014-07-10)
Platform: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu (64-bit)
locale:
[1] LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8 LC_NUMERIC=C LC_TIME=en_US.UTF-8
LC_COLLATE=en_US.UTF-8 LC_MONETARY=en_US.UTF-8
[6] LC_MESSAGES=en_US.UTF-8 LC_PAPER=en_US.UTF-8
LC_NAME=C LC_ADDRESS=C LC_TELEPHONE=C
[11] LC_MEASUREMENT=en_US.UTF-8 LC_IDENTIFICATION=C
attached base packages:
[1] parallel stats graphics grDevices utils datasets methods
base
other attached packages:
[1] ggplot2_1.0.0 plyr_1.8.1 DEXSeq_1.10.8
BiocParallel_0.6.1 DESeq2_1.4.5 RcppArmadillo_0.4.320.0
[7] Rcpp_0.11.2 GenomicRanges_1.16.2
GenomeInfoDb_1.0.2 IRanges_1.21.43 Biobase_2.24.0
BiocGenerics_0.10.0
loaded via a namespace (and not attached):
[1] annotate_1.42.1 AnnotationDbi_1.26.0 BatchJobs_1.3
BBmisc_1.7 biomaRt_2.20.0 Biostrings_2.32.0
[7] bitops_1.0-6 brew_1.0-6 checkmate_1.2
codetools_0.2-8 colorspace_1.2-4 DBI_0.2-7
[13] digest_0.6.4 fail_1.2 foreach_1.4.2
genefilter_1.46.1 geneplotter_1.42.0 grid_3.1.1
[19] gtable_0.1.2 hwriter_1.3 iterators_1.0.7
lattice_0.20-29 locfit_1.5-9.1 MASS_7.3-33
[25] munsell_0.4.2 proto_0.3-10 RColorBrewer_1.0-5
RCurl_1.95-4.1 reshape2_1.4 Rsamtools_1.16.0
[31] RSQLite_0.11.4 scales_0.2.4 sendmailR_1.1-2
splines_3.1.1 statmod_1.4.20 stats4_3.1.1
[37] stringr_0.6.2 survival_2.37-7 tools_3.1.1
XML_3.98-1.1 xtable_1.7-3 XVector_0.4.0
[43] zlibbioc_1.10.0
--
Ant?nio Miguel de Jesus Domingues, PhD
Postdoctoral researcher
Deep Sequencing Group - SFB655
Biotechnology Center (Biotec)
Technische Universit?t Dresden
Fetscherstra?e 105
01307 Dresden
Phone: +49 (351) 458 82362
Email: antonio.domingues(at)biotec.tu-dresden.de
--
The Unbearable Lightness of Molecular Biology
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