A quality control system for profiles obtained by ChIP sequencing

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Abstract

The absence of a quality control (QC) system is a major weakness for the comparative analysis of genome-wide profiles generated by next-generation sequencing (NGS). This concerns particularly genome binding/occupancy profiling assays like chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP-seq) but also related enrichment-based studies like methylated DNA immunoprecipitation/methylated DNA binding domain sequencing, global run on sequencing or RNA-seq. Importantly, QC assessment may significantly improve multidimensional comparisons that have great promise for extracting information from combinatorial analyses of the global profiles established for chromatin modifications, the bindings of epigenetic and chromatin-modifying enzymes/ machineries, RNA polymerases and transcription factors and total, nascent or ribosome-bound RNAs. Here we present an approach that associates global and local QC indicators to ChIP-seq data sets as well as to a variety of enrichment-based studies by NGS. This QC system was used to certify >5600 publicly available data sets, hosted in a database for data mining and comparative QC analyses. © The Author(s) 2013. Published by Oxford University Press.

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Mendoza-Parra, M. A., Van Gool, W., Saleem, M. A. M., Ceschin, D. G., & Gronemeyer, H. (2013). A quality control system for profiles obtained by ChIP sequencing. Nucleic Acids Research, 41(21). https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkt829

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