Hi,
So I have a conceptual question I'm trying to get my head around. I have some RNA-seq data and was trying to determine the ORF of each read. Of course a six reading frame translation of a given nucleotide sequence would be expected to have a significant ORF in at least one frame, as long as the sequence comes from a gene region.
However, I find short bits of sequences (my 150bp RNA-seq reads) that appears to have continuous ORFs on all 6 frames of translation without any stop codons at all... how can this be? Since there are 3 stop codons out of 64 possibilities, we should statistically see a stop every 21AA (63 bases) or so.
I realize this could be an anomaly, but this seems to be the case with about 10% of all my RNA-seq reads. I realize this could happen with repetitive sequence, but I don't think that is the case, since it is RNA-seq data.
Any thoughts or speculations are gladly welcomed!!
So I have a conceptual question I'm trying to get my head around. I have some RNA-seq data and was trying to determine the ORF of each read. Of course a six reading frame translation of a given nucleotide sequence would be expected to have a significant ORF in at least one frame, as long as the sequence comes from a gene region.
However, I find short bits of sequences (my 150bp RNA-seq reads) that appears to have continuous ORFs on all 6 frames of translation without any stop codons at all... how can this be? Since there are 3 stop codons out of 64 possibilities, we should statistically see a stop every 21AA (63 bases) or so.
I realize this could be an anomaly, but this seems to be the case with about 10% of all my RNA-seq reads. I realize this could happen with repetitive sequence, but I don't think that is the case, since it is RNA-seq data.
Any thoughts or speculations are gladly welcomed!!
Comment