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  • Questions about ERCC RNA Spike-In Control

    Hi everyone

    We're hoping to start an RNASeq run on the Illumina HiSeq SQ with 50 bases paired-end sequencing in the next few weeks. I recently came across the ERCC Spike-In Control, which lets you add known amounts of mRNA to your sample. I'm interested in using the ExFold mixes, which are two mixes with different amounts of the same mRNAs.

    It looks like it could be really useful! But I want to hear experiences of people who have used it, any caveats when combining them into RNA sample in making the cDNA library and how well this control performs?

    Any advice will be greatly appreciated

    Thanks in advance,

    Frazzled

  • #2
    idem

    Hi Frazzled! This is probably too late but I would like the discussion to be open again. 1 year after you, I have exactly the same question and have some troubles to find someone who has already used it for RNAseq. Everybody around me tells, this is absolutely needed to compare results from different platforms but nobody use it or at least knows someone that would have been eared about a guy who would have already used it.
    This approach is strongly recommended by the ENCODE consortium (http://genome.ucsc.edu/ENCODE/protoc...dards_V1.0.pdf + https://www.google.ca/url?sa=t&rct=j...47380653,d.aWM + http://nxseq.bitesizebio.com/article...-its-solution/).

    However, I could only find 3 papers seriously considering this and performing some pilot experiments (http://genome.cshlp.org/content/21/9/1543.long + http://www.sciencedirect.com/science...92867412012263 + http://link.springer.com/article/10....427-013-4437-9)

    I contacted both Illumina and Epicentre and they don't really care about this. Epicentre just told me that one customer lost half of reads in spike-in sequencing (I guess he/she should have put a huge amount, I have no information on it).
    "[...] we do not normally recommend them, and I just spoke with a customer overseas who did use them and it completely "swamped out" the data from the sample such that the spiked RNA provided the bulk of the data. Remember that ScriptSeq uses a very minimal amount of RNA (500 pg to 50 ng) and we'd be worried about how much of the data generated would be from the bona fide sample versus the spiked in RNA."

    Staff Technical Applications Scientist
    Epicentre (an Illumina company)
    (800) 284-8474, ext 66119
    608.442.6119
    Website: www.epicentre.com

    My conclusion is that one who wants to use it should perform a pilot experiment (what should actually be done for any RNAseq analysis). I know because of time and money, this is not always possible. In my case, I have neither time nor money for pilot experiments so I'll go (with deep regrets) to library construction without spike-in controls and assess like many others that the coverage and global expression levels are not significantly variable between my samples (what I guess is not true).
    Anyway, there is no perfect experiment and there are probably many bad things we are doing and we don't now yet. For sure, RNAseq standards are not fixed forever.

    I would be glad to ear different opinions if somebody already included these controls.
    Last edited by Macrophage; 06-04-2013, 08:29 PM.

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    • #3
      You will probably not get a great answer from Epicentre or Illumina because they do not make this product. I believe Ambion is the only group that has taken on making this set of controls.

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