Abstract

Accurate quantification of gene or isoform expression with RNA-Seq depends on complete knowledge of the transcriptome. Because a complete genomic annotation does not yet exist, novel isoform discovery is an important component of the RNA-Seq quantification process. Thus, a typical RNA-Seq pipeline includes a transcriptome mapping step to quantify known genes and isoforms, and a reference genome mapping step to discover new genes and isoforms. Several tools implement this approach, but are limited in that they force the use of a single mapping algorithm at both the transcriptome and reference genome mapping stages. The choice of mapping algorithm could affect quantification accuracy on a per-dataset basis. Thus, we describe a method that enables the merging of transcriptome and reference genome mapping stages provided that they conform to the standard SAM/BAM format. This procedure could potentially improve the accuracy of gene or isoform quantification by increasing flexibility when selecting RNA-Seq data analysis pipelines. We demonstrate an example of a flexible RNA-Seq pipeline by assessing its potential for novel isoform discovery and by validating its quantification performance using qRT-PCR.

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