Description Details References Examples
Sets of "positive" and "negative" control genes, useful arguments for
scone
.
These gene sets can be used as negative or positive controls, either for RUV factor normalization or for evaluation and ranking of the normalization workflows.
Gene set datasets are in the form of data.frame
, with the
first column containing the gene symbols and an (optional) second column
containing additional information (such as cortical layer or cell cycle
phase).
Note that the gene symbols follow the mouse conventions (i.e.
capitalized) or the human conventions (i.e, all upper-case), based on the
original publication. One can use the toupper
,
tolower
, and toTitleCase
functions to alter symbol conventions.
Mouse gene symbols in cortical_markers
are transcribed from
Figure 3 of Molyneaux et al. (2007): "laminar-specific expression of 66
genes within the neocortex."
Human gene symbols in housekeeping
are derived from the list
of "housekeeping" genes from the cDNA microarray analysis of Eisenberg
and Levanon (2003): "[HK genes] belong to the class of genes that are
EXPRESSED in all tissues." "... from 47 different human tissues and cell
lines."
Human gene symbols in housekeeping_revised
from Eisenberg
and Levanon (2013): "This list provided ... is based on analysis of
next-generation sequencing (RNA-seq) data. At least one variant of these
genes is expressed in all tissues uniformly... The RefSeq transcript
according to which we deemed the gene 'housekeeping' is given."
Housekeeping exons satisfy "(i) expression observed in all tissues; (ii)
low variance over tissues: standard-deviation [log2(RPKM)]<1; and (iii) no
exceptional expression in any single tissue; that is, no log-expression
value differed from the averaged log2(RPKM) by two (fourfold) or more."
"We define a housekeeping gene as a gene for which at least one RefSeq
transcript has more than half of its exons meeting the previous criteria
(thus being housekeeping exons)."
Human gene symbols in cellcycle_genes
from Macosko et al.
(2015) and represent a set of genes marking G1/S, S, G2/M, M, and M/G1
phases.
Molyneaux, B.J., Arlotta, P., Menezes, J.R. and Macklis, J.D.. Neuronal subtype specification in the cerebral cortex. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2007, 8(6):427-437.
Eisenberg E, Levanon EY. Human housekeeping genes are compact. Trends in Genetics, 2003, 19(7):362-5.
Eisenberg E, Levanon EY. Human housekeeping genes, revisited. Trends in Genetics, 2013, 29(10):569-74.
Macosko, E. Z., et al. Highly parallel genome-wide expression profiling of individual cells using nanoliter droplets. Cell, 2015, 161.5:1202-1214.
1 2 3 4 |
Add the following code to your website.
For more information on customizing the embed code, read Embedding Snippets.