Entering edit mode
Dear Assaf,
You are getting the sort of results that I would expect you to get
when
you try to compare two RNA sources that are very different.
The diagonal lines in the MA plot are simply a result of having low
counts
(0,1,2 etc) in one species and high counts in the other for the same
genes.
When you compare different species, I'd intuitively expect almost
every
gene to be differentially expressed to some degree. So I'm not
surprised
that a large proportion of genes are assesssed as DE.
That's about as much help as I can give you. I can't give advice that
would allow you to get the same sort of results as you might be used
to,
because comparing different species isn't a normal thing to do.
Best wishes
Gordon
> Date: Fri, 5 Sep 2014 23:22:28 +0300
> From: assaf www <assafwww at="" gmail.com="">
> To: Gordon K Smyth <smyth at="" wehi.edu.au="">
> Cc: Bioconductor mailing list <bioconductor at="" r-project.org="">
> Subject: Re: [BioC] Interspecies differential expression of
orthologs
> with Edger
>
> Thanks Gordon,
>
> To summarize the results I got on the cross-species data, after
embedding
> the length-effect to the GLM offset matrix, as in the code you sent,
please
> see the attached MA plot:
>
> 1) for >5 and <-5 log fold change, genes' logFC is positively
correlated
> with mean log CPM, something I haven?t seen before in Edger standard
runs.
> 2) most genes with fold change around > 1.3, or < -1.3, are
significant,
> which looks to me too ?liberal?. Please note that each group
contains 6
> true biological replicates (variance within each group is large) .
>
> The first problem worries me most, any idea is very welcomed.
>
> Many thanks,
> Assaf
>
>
>
> On Wed, Sep 3, 2014 at 2:08 AM, Gordon K Smyth <smyth at="" wehi.edu.au=""> wrote:
>
>>
>> On Tue, 2 Sep 2014, assaf www wrote:
>>
>> Does Edger DE analysis is built on the assumption that most genes
are not
>>> differentially expressed, and that only a small portion of them do
(say
>>> <20%) ?
>>>
>>
>> Only the calcNormFactors() step of edgeR makes any assumption of
this
>> sort. calcNormFactors assumes that either that most genes are not
DE or
>> that the DE is reasonably symmetric.
>>
>> I mean, in cross-species studies, or when comparing different
tissues of
>>> the same organism, if this assumption doesn't hold, should it be a
serious
>>> concern ?
>>>
>>
>> In a cross-species comparison there will be many DE genes, but some
will
>> be up and some will be down. The DE will not be all in one
direction, I
>> would guess that normalization will not be a serious concern.
>>
>> Of all the concerns with cross-species comparisons, this seems to
me to be
>> far from the most serious.
>>
>> Best wishes
>> Gordon
>>
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