A beginner's guide to analysis of RNA sequencing data

CM Koch, SF Chiu, M Akbarpour, A Bharat… - American journal of …, 2018 - atsjournals.org
CM Koch, SF Chiu, M Akbarpour, A Bharat, KM Ridge, ET Bartom, DR Winter
American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology, 2018atsjournals.org
Since the first publications coining the term RNA-seq (RNA sequencing) appeared in 2008,
the number of publications containing RNA-seq data has grown exponentially, hitting an all-
time high of 2,808 publications in 2016 (PubMed). With this wealth of RNA-seq data being
generated, it is a challenge to extract maximal meaning from these datasets, and without the
appropriate skills and background, there is risk of misinterpretation of these data. However,
a general understanding of the principles underlying each step of RNA-seq data analysis …
Since the first publications coining the term RNA-seq (RNA sequencing) appeared in 2008, the number of publications containing RNA-seq data has grown exponentially, hitting an all-time high of 2,808 publications in 2016 (PubMed). With this wealth of RNA-seq data being generated, it is a challenge to extract maximal meaning from these datasets, and without the appropriate skills and background, there is risk of misinterpretation of these data. However, a general understanding of the principles underlying each step of RNA-seq data analysis allows investigators without a background in programming and bioinformatics to critically analyze their own datasets as well as published data. Our goals in the present review are to break down the steps of a typical RNA-seq analysis and to highlight the pitfalls and checkpoints along the way that are vital for bench scientists and biomedical researchers performing experiments that use RNA-seq.
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