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Hi Indu,To answer your questions:1. Skew ratio refers to the number of NGS reads for the 90th percentile divided by those of the 10th percentile.2. Depends on how many NGS reads you had total. The QC metrics are for a sequencing depth of 100 reads/sgRNA in the library, and you should have <0.5% guides that were not detected (i.e., 0 reads).3. I usually pool technical replicates together before sequencing, but you can also do this after sequencing. If you followed the protocol to amplify the sgRNA library for NGS QC, then you should not have to repeat this step. Usually the problem occurs at the library transformation step, but of course this depends on what your library metrics currently look like.Best,Julia
On Thu, Mar 21, 2019 at 8:52 PM Indumati Sharma <math...@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi All,--We recently purchased the Brie library from Addgene and sequenced the library subsequent to transformation and PCR amplification.I wanted to know what the typical threshold is to judge if we have got enough of representation and diversity of each of the sgRNA. I see from Joung et al (2017)-"An ideal sgRNA library should have >70% perfectly matching guides, <0.5% undetected guides, and a skew ratio of less than 10."Along these terms:1) I was wondering what skew ratio is?2) We see many sgRNAs which have reads less than 100. Is that concerning?3) We sequenced 4 technical replicates, out of which two have shown to have reasonable representation of sgRNA , whereas the other two replicates do not. I am at crossroads right now to decide if I need to repeat plasmid library amplification. If we do what factors determine where we would need to restart the process? Do we start from library transformation step? or Can we go back to the extracted plasmid DNA and re-seqence to see if it was just sampling problem.Your help is much appreciated.Thanks,Indu
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|
A - Amplified |
A - Original |
B - Amplified |
B - Original |
|
|
Number of reads processed |
25,419,745 |
28,134,930 |
32,923,233 |
26,168,525 |
|
Number of perfect guide matches |
18,008,956 |
19,844,560 |
22,417,200 |
17,788,394 |
|
Number of nonperfect guide matches |
4,798,152 |
5,374,973 |
6,754,415 |
5,383,355 |
|
Number of reads where key was not found |
2,612,637 |
2,915,397 |
3,751,618 |
2,996,776 |
|
Percentage of guides that matched perfectly |
79.0 |
78.7 |
76.8 |
76.8 |
|
Percentage of undetected guides |
1.7 |
0.4 |
3.3 |
2.3 |
|
Skew ratio of top 10% to bottom 10% |
13.24 |
10.42 |
20.66 |
18.06 |
Hi Indu,To answer your questions:1. Skew ratio refers to the number of NGS reads for the 90th percentile divided by those of the 10th percentile.2. Depends on how many NGS reads you had total. The QC metrics are for a sequencing depth of 100 reads/sgRNA in the library, and you should have <0.5% guides that were not detected (i.e., 0 reads).3. I usually pool technical replicates together before sequencing, but you can also do this after sequencing. If you followed the protocol to amplify the sgRNA library for NGS QC, then you should not have to repeat this step. Usually the problem occurs at the library transformation step, but of course this depends on what your library metrics currently look like.Best,Julia
On Thu, Mar 21, 2019 at 8:52 PM Indumati Sharma <math...@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi All,--We recently purchased the Brie library from Addgene and sequenced the library subsequent to transformation and PCR amplification.I wanted to know what the typical threshold is to judge if we have got enough of representation and diversity of each of the sgRNA. I see from Joung et al (2017)-"An ideal sgRNA library should have >70% perfectly matching guides, <0.5% undetected guides, and a skew ratio of less than 10."Along these terms:1) I was wondering what skew ratio is?2) We see many sgRNAs which have reads less than 100. Is that concerning?3) We sequenced 4 technical replicates, out of which two have shown to have reasonable representation of sgRNA , whereas the other two replicates do not. I am at crossroads right now to decide if I need to repeat plasmid library amplification. If we do what factors determine where we would need to restart the process? Do we start from library transformation step? or Can we go back to the extracted plasmid DNA and re-seqence to see if it was just sampling problem.Your help is much appreciated.Thanks,Indu
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