Unconfigured Ad

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • zslee
    Member
    • May 2009
    • 29

    to decide whether a mutation is non-synonimous or not

    i have short solexa sequences mapping to genome, in some positions there're
    some certain enriched mutations, how do i know whether this mutation is non-synonimous or not ?
    one method is download transcript isoforms and coding annotations from ucsc, then count from the coding start site to determine what codon this position belong to then go to codon - Aa table t ocheck, can anyone give me better method ? thanks in advance

    also, i have checked, in biomart we can download phase information ~
    maybe i will use this

    ZSL
    Last edited by zslee; 12-07-2009, 11:57 PM.
  • brasj
    Member
    • Aug 2008
    • 13

    #2
    Is this human genomic? If it is, we have been using SIFT for this with great success.

    Comment

    • zslee
      Member
      • May 2009
      • 29

      #3
      Originally posted by brasj View Post
      Is this human genomic? If it is, we have been using SIFT for this with great success.
      SIFT (Sorting Intolerant From Tolerant) is a program that predicts whether an amino acid substitution affects protein function
      my work is simpler, i just want to know whether a change of bases on human genome affect the amino acide coded, maybe SIFT can be used next step of my project,
      so thanks a lot ~~

      Comment

      • krobison
        Senior Member
        • Nov 2007
        • 734

        #4
        Your original proposal is pretty much the definition of how to do it; under what metric is it less than ideal?

        Comment

        • swbarnes2
          Senior Member
          • May 2008
          • 910

          #5
          I would think BLASTx is the tool of choice here. You determine where in your sequence your change is, and make sure that the BLASTx match covers that letter.

          Comment

          • krobison
            Senior Member
            • Nov 2007
            • 734

            #6
            No, BLASTX is very poor choice for multiple reasons:

            1) Misclassifications, both false positive & false negative, around splice junctions
            2) Speed. Much slower than doing lookup.
            3) Very short exons will be missed
            4) More risk of confusing paralogs & pseudogenes with your actual gene

            Mapping the position to annotated transcript(s) and then computing the new codon & comparing its translation to the old codon is fast, simple & guaranteed. Hard to see why one would choose slow & error-prone over that.

            Comment

            • brasj
              Member
              • Aug 2008
              • 13

              #7
              guys, give sift a look.

              you stick all your variants in there and it outputs a list of all of them that are coding and the change it does in the protein. Additionally, it also gives them a score of "tolerability".

              if I understood correctly, this does all you need... and more

              Assuming this is human dna, of course.

              Comment

              • zslee
                Member
                • May 2009
                • 29

                #8
                thanks to you all
                i 'll first use krobison's suggestion and consider sift later
                ~~

                Comment

                • colindaven
                  Senior Member
                  • Oct 2008
                  • 417

                  #9
                  There is another thread on this topic -

                  Discussion of next-gen sequencing related bioinformatics: resources, algorithms, open source efforts, etc


                  Myself and some others have already developed scripts for this.
                  Sift is good, but is for the human genome only.

                  Comment

                  Latest Articles

                  Collapse

                  • SEQadmin2
                    Nine Things a Sample Prep Scientist Thinks About Before Sequencing
                    by SEQadmin2


                    I’m not a sequencing expert. I’m a purification scientist who uses NGS to evaluate workflows my group develops. With this perspective, we think about the sample first and the NGS workflow second. The sequencer is an exceptionally honest reporter, but it can only report on what you give it, so whether you get clean, interpretable data from an NGS workflow is largely determined before you begin.

                    Here are nine questions we think about, in roughly the order they matter, before...
                    06-18-2026, 07:11 AM
                  • SEQadmin2
                    From Collection to Sequencing: Why Sample Preparation and Preservation Define Sequencing Data
                    by SEQadmin2


                    Data variability is still an issue in sequencing technologies despite the advances in reproducibility and accuracy of these platforms. But the problem does not originate in the sequencing itself, but in the previous steps, before the sample reaches the sequencer.


                    The first step is collection, followed by preservation and sample preparation for analysis. Most scientists overlook those steps, but not being careful might just be skewing the experiment’s results.
                    ...
                    06-02-2026, 10:05 AM

                  ad_right_rmr

                  Collapse

                  News

                  Collapse

                  Topics Statistics Last Post
                  Started by SEQadmin2, 06-17-2026, 06:09 AM
                  0 responses
                  36 views
                  0 reactions
                  Last Post SEQadmin2  
                  Started by SEQadmin2, 06-09-2026, 11:58 AM
                  0 responses
                  100 views
                  0 reactions
                  Last Post SEQadmin2  
                  Started by SEQadmin2, 06-05-2026, 10:09 AM
                  0 responses
                  120 views
                  0 reactions
                  Last Post SEQadmin2  
                  Started by SEQadmin2, 06-04-2026, 08:59 AM
                  0 responses
                  113 views
                  0 reactions
                  Last Post SEQadmin2  
                  Working...