Effect of method of deduplication on estimation of differential gene expression using RNA-seq

PeerJ. 2017 Mar 16:5:e3091. doi: 10.7717/peerj.3091. eCollection 2017.

Abstract

Background: RNA-seq is a useful tool for analysis of gene expression. However, its robustness is greatly affected by a number of artifacts. One of them is the presence of duplicated reads.

Results: To infer the influence of different methods of removal of duplicated reads on estimation of gene expression in cancer genomics, we analyzed paired samples of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and non-tumor liver tissue. Four protocols of data analysis were applied to each sample: processing without deduplication, deduplication using a method implemented in SAMtools, and deduplication based on one or two molecular indices (MI). We also analyzed the influence of sequencing layout (single read or paired end) and read length. We found that deduplication without MI greatly affects estimated expression values; this effect is the most pronounced for highly expressed genes.

Conclusion: The use of unique molecular identifiers greatly improves accuracy of RNA-seq analysis, especially for highly expressed genes. We developed a set of scripts that enable handling of MI and their incorporation into RNA-seq analysis pipelines. Deduplication without MI affects results of differential gene expression analysis, producing a high proportion of false negative results. The absence of duplicate read removal is biased towards false positives. In those cases where using MI is not possible, we recommend using paired-end sequencing layout.

Keywords: Cancer genomics; Deduplication; Differential expression; Hepatocarcinoma; RNA-seq.

Grants and funding

The study was supported by the Ministry of Education and Science of Russia (project #14.607.21.0049, ID RFMEFI60714X0049). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.