Parseq: Reconstruction of microbial transcription landscape from RNA-Seq read counts using state-space models

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Abstract

Motivation: The most common RNA-Seq strategy consists of random shearing, amplification and high-throughput sequencing of the RNA fraction. Methods to analyze transcription level variations along the genome from the read count profiles generated by the RNA-Seq protocol are needed. Results: We developed a statistical approach to estimate the local transcription levels and to identify transcript borders. This transcriptional landscape reconstruction relies on a state-space model to describe transcription level variations in terms of abrupt shifts and more progressive drifts. A new emission model is introduced to capture not only the read count variance inside a transcript but also its short-range autocorrelation and the fraction of positions with zero counts. The estimation relies on a particle Gibbs algorithm whose running time makes it more suited to microbial genomes. The approach outperformed read-overlapping strategies on synthetic and real microbial datasets. © The Author 2014.

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Mirauta, B., Nicolas, P., & Richard, H. (2014). Parseq: Reconstruction of microbial transcription landscape from RNA-Seq read counts using state-space models. Bioinformatics, 30(10), 1409–1416. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btu042

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