Identification and control for the effects of bioinformatic globin depletion on human RNA-seq differential expression analysis
Details
Publication Year 2023-02-01,Volume 13,Issue #1,Page 1859
Journal Title
Scientific Reports
Abstract
When profiling blood samples by RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq), RNA from haemoglobin (Hgb) can account for up to 70% of the transcriptome. Due to considerations of sequencing depth and power to detect biological variation, Hgb RNA is typically depleted prior to sequencing by hybridisation-based methods; an alternative approach is to deplete reads arising from Hgb RNA bioinformatically. In the present study, we compared the impact of these two approaches on the outcome of differential gene expression analysis performed using RNA-seq data from 58 human tuberculosis (TB) patient or contact whole blood samples-29 globin kit-depleted and 29 matched non-depleted-a subset of which were taken at TB diagnosis and at six months post-TB treatment from the same patient. Bioinformatic depletion of Hgb genes from the non-depleted samples (bioinformatic-depleted) substantially reduced library sizes (median = 57.24%) and fewer long non-coding, micro, small nuclear and small nucleolar RNAs were captured in these libraries. Profiling published TB gene signatures across all samples revealed inferior correlation between kit-depleted and bioinformatic-depleted pairs when the proportion of reads mapping to Hgb genes was higher in the non-depleted sample, particularly at the TB diagnosis time point. A set of putative "globin-fingerprint" genes were identified by directly comparing kit-depleted and bioinformatic-depleted samples at each timepoint. Two TB treatment response signatures were also shown to have decreased differential performance when comparing samples at TB diagnosis to six months post-TB treatment when profiled on the bioinformatic-depleted samples compared with their kit-depleted counterparts. These results demonstrate that failure to deplete Hgb RNA prior to sequencing has a negative impact on the sensitivity to detect disease-relevant gene expression changes even when bioinformatic removal is performed.
Publisher
NPG
Keywords
Humans; RNA, Messenger/genetics; *Gene Expression Profiling/methods; RNA-Seq; *RNA/genetics; Transcriptome; Sequence Analysis, RNA; Hemoglobins/genetics
Research Division(s)
Epigenetics And Development; Infectious Diseases And Immune Defence
PubMed ID
36725870/
Open Access at Publisher's Site
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-28218-7
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 2023-02-27 10:36:17
Last Modified: 2023-03-06 01:28:25
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