Assessment of microRNA differential expression and detection in multiplexed small RNA sequencing data

Author:

Campbell Joshua D.ORCID,Liu Gang,Luo Lingqi,Xiao Ji,Gerrein Joseph,Juan-Guardela Brenda,Tedrow John,Alekseyev Yuriy O.,Yang Ivana V.,Correll Mick,Geraci Mark,Quackenbush John,Sciurba Frank,Schwartz David A.,Kaminski Naftali,Johnson W. Evan,Monti Stefano,Spira Avrum,Beane Jennifer,Lenburg Marc E.

Abstract

Small RNA sequencing can be used to gain an unprecedented amount of detail into the microRNA transcriptome. The relatively high cost and low throughput of sequencing bases technologies can potentially be offset by the use of multiplexing. However, multiplexing involves a trade-off between increased number of sequenced samples and reduced number of reads per sample (i.e., lower depth of coverage). To assess the effect of different sequencing depths owing to multiplexing on microRNA differential expression and detection, we sequenced the small RNA of lung tissue samples collected in a clinical setting by multiplexing one, three, six, nine, or 12 samples per lane using the Illumina HiSeq 2000. As expected, the numbers of reads obtained per sample decreased as the number of samples in a multiplex increased. Furthermore, after normalization, replicate samples included in distinct multiplexes were highly correlated (R > 0.97). When detecting differential microRNA expression between groups of samples, microRNAs with average expression >1 reads per million (RPM) had reproducible fold change estimates (signal to noise) independent of the degree of multiplexing. The number of microRNAs detected was strongly correlated with the log2 number of reads aligning to microRNA loci (R = 0.96). However, most additional microRNAs detected in samples with greater sequencing depth were in the range of expression which had lower fold change reproducibility. These findings elucidate the trade-off between increasing the number of samples in a multiplex with decreasing sequencing depth and will aid in the design of large-scale clinical studies exploring microRNA expression and its role in disease.

Funder

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

National Cancer Institute's Early Detection Research Network

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Subject

Molecular Biology

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