Re: [galaxy-user] Pseudo Autosomal regions in Chrs X and Y

2011-03-29 Thread David Matthews
Fantastic, many thanks!


Best Wishes,
David.

__
Dr David A. Matthews

Senior Lecturer in Virology
Room E49
Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine,
School of Medical Sciences
University Walk,
University of Bristol
Bristol.
BS8 1TD
U.K.

Tel. +44 117 3312058
Fax. +44 117 3312091

d.a.matth...@bristol.ac.uk






On 29 Mar 2011, at 00:19, Jennifer Jackson wrote:

 Hi David,
 
 The PAR regions are documented at UCSC on the hg19 genome gateway page (and 
 for some other recent genomes). Start at the main page, click into Genomes, 
 select hg19, then scroll down to credits:
 
 http://genome.ucsc.edu/
 
 quote:
 
 The Y chromosome in this assembly contains two pseudoautosomal regions (PARs) 
 that were taken from the corresponding regions in the X chromosome and are 
 exact duplicates:
 
 chrY:10001-2649520 and chrY:59034050-59363566
 chrX:60001-2699520 and chrX:154931044-155260560
 
 Hopefully this helps!
 Jen
 
 On 3/28/11 2:04 PM, David Matthews wrote:
 Hi,
 
 Again, thanks for the feedback. I made my own female hg19 by deleting chrY 
 from my copy of hg19 so thats OK. It still leaves the problem of how to 
 analyse male transcriptomes since maps to PAR1 and 2 genes get reported as 
 multimap reads which can end up being filtered out depending on how you 
 analyse your transcriptome. If I knew with certainty where PAR1 and 2 are on 
 chrY of hg19 I was planning to replace the nucleotides with N's on chrY so 
 that they would no longer show up as a multimap problem - do you (or anyone 
 else) happen to know the co-ordinates on hg19?
 
 Cheers
 David
 
 
 On 23 Mar 2011, at 14:19, Jennifer Jackson wrote:
 
 Hi David,
 
 Right now we don't have anything built-in to filter out this type of 
 duplication automatically.
 
 As a potential option, did you know that we offer a Canonical Female 
 build for certain genomes? This may help with some of the duplication 
 issues, if the loss of novel Y is OK for your project.
 
 Please see:
 https://bitbucket.org/galaxy/galaxy-central/wiki/GenomeData
 
 Thanks for bringing up a good point!
 
 Best,
 Jen
 
 
 On 3/10/11 8:44 AM, David Matthews wrote:
 Hi All again,
 
 A separate point about the analysis of cufflinks data is the subject of
 the Pseudo Autosomal Regions in X and Y - this will make a mess of gene
 expression analysis in some cases especially because tophat will assign
 a read to both places which therefore makes it a multihit read (which
 you might then filter out) or it may double the true levels of reported
 expression. Anyone had experience/thoughts on this?
 
 Best Wishes,
 David.
 
 __
 Dr David A. Matthews
 
 Senior Lecturer in Virology
 Room E49
 Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine,
 School of Medical Sciences
 University Walk,
 University of Bristol
 Bristol.
 BS8 1TD
 U.K.
 
 Tel. +44 117 3312058
 Fax. +44 117 3312091
 
 d.a.matth...@bristol.ac.ukmailto:d.a.matth...@bristol.ac.uk
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 ___
 The Galaxy User list should be used for the discussion of
 Galaxy analysis and other features on the public server
 at usegalaxy.org.  Please keep all replies on the list by
 using reply all in your mail client.  For discussion of
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 please use the interface at:
 
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 --
 Jennifer Jackson
 http://usegalaxy.org
 http://galaxyproject.org
 
 
 
 -- 
 Jennifer Jackson
 http://usegalaxy.org
 http://galaxyproject.org

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Re: [galaxy-user] Pseudo Autosomal regions in Chrs X and Y

2011-03-28 Thread Hiram Clawson
Listed on the hg19 gateway page at the UCSC genome browser.

- Original Message -
From: David Matthews d.a.matth...@bristol.ac.uk
To: Jennifer Jackson j...@bx.psu.edu
Cc: galaxy-u...@bx.psu.edu
Sent: Monday, March 28, 2011 2:04:02 PM
Subject: Re: [galaxy-user] Pseudo Autosomal regions in Chrs X and Y

Hi,

Again, thanks for the feedback. I made my own female hg19 by deleting chrY from 
my copy of hg19 so thats OK. It still leaves the problem of how to analyse male 
transcriptomes since maps to PAR1 and 2 genes get reported as multimap reads 
which can end up being filtered out depending on how you analyse your 
transcriptome. If I knew with certainty where PAR1 and 2 are on chrY of hg19 I 
was planning to replace the nucleotides with N's on chrY so that they would no 
longer show up as a multimap problem - do you (or anyone else) happen to know 
the co-ordinates on hg19?

Cheers
David


On 23 Mar 2011, at 14:19, Jennifer Jackson wrote:

 Hi David,
 
 Right now we don't have anything built-in to filter out this type of 
 duplication automatically.
 
 As a potential option, did you know that we offer a Canonical Female build 
 for certain genomes? This may help with some of the duplication issues, if 
 the loss of novel Y is OK for your project.
 
 Please see:
 https://bitbucket.org/galaxy/galaxy-central/wiki/GenomeData
 
 Thanks for bringing up a good point!
 
 Best,
 Jen
 
 
 On 3/10/11 8:44 AM, David Matthews wrote:
 Hi All again,
 
 A separate point about the analysis of cufflinks data is the subject of
 the Pseudo Autosomal Regions in X and Y - this will make a mess of gene
 expression analysis in some cases especially because tophat will assign
 a read to both places which therefore makes it a multihit read (which
 you might then filter out) or it may double the true levels of reported
 expression. Anyone had experience/thoughts on this?
 
 Best Wishes,
 David.
 
 __
 Dr David A. Matthews
 
 Senior Lecturer in Virology
 Room E49
 Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine,
 School of Medical Sciences
 University Walk,
 University of Bristol
 Bristol.
 BS8 1TD
 U.K.
 
 Tel. +44 117 3312058
 Fax. +44 117 3312091
 
 d.a.matth...@bristol.ac.uk mailto:d.a.matth...@bristol.ac.uk
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 ___
 The Galaxy User list should be used for the discussion of
 Galaxy analysis and other features on the public server
 at usegalaxy.org.  Please keep all replies on the list by
 using reply all in your mail client.  For discussion of
 local Galaxy instances and the Galaxy source code, please
 use the Galaxy Development list:
 
   http://lists.bx.psu.edu/listinfo/galaxy-dev
 
 To manage your subscriptions to this and other Galaxy lists,
 please use the interface at:
 
   http://lists.bx.psu.edu/
 
 -- 
 Jennifer Jackson
 http://usegalaxy.org
 http://galaxyproject.org


___
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Galaxy analysis and other features on the public server
at usegalaxy.org.  Please keep all replies on the list by
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please use the interface at:

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Re: [galaxy-user] Pseudo Autosomal regions in Chrs X and Y

2011-03-28 Thread Jennifer Jackson

Hi David,

The PAR regions are documented at UCSC on the hg19 genome gateway page 
(and for some other recent genomes). Start at the main page, click into 
Genomes, select hg19, then scroll down to credits:


http://genome.ucsc.edu/

quote:

The Y chromosome in this assembly contains two pseudoautosomal regions 
(PARs) that were taken from the corresponding regions in the X 
chromosome and are exact duplicates:


chrY:10001-2649520 and chrY:59034050-59363566
chrX:60001-2699520 and chrX:154931044-155260560

Hopefully this helps!
Jen

On 3/28/11 2:04 PM, David Matthews wrote:

Hi,

Again, thanks for the feedback. I made my own female hg19 by deleting chrY from 
my copy of hg19 so thats OK. It still leaves the problem of how to analyse male 
transcriptomes since maps to PAR1 and 2 genes get reported as multimap reads 
which can end up being filtered out depending on how you analyse your 
transcriptome. If I knew with certainty where PAR1 and 2 are on chrY of hg19 I 
was planning to replace the nucleotides with N's on chrY so that they would no 
longer show up as a multimap problem - do you (or anyone else) happen to know 
the co-ordinates on hg19?

Cheers
David


On 23 Mar 2011, at 14:19, Jennifer Jackson wrote:


Hi David,

Right now we don't have anything built-in to filter out this type of 
duplication automatically.

As a potential option, did you know that we offer a Canonical Female build 
for certain genomes? This may help with some of the duplication issues, if the loss of 
novel Y is OK for your project.

Please see:
https://bitbucket.org/galaxy/galaxy-central/wiki/GenomeData

Thanks for bringing up a good point!

Best,
Jen


On 3/10/11 8:44 AM, David Matthews wrote:

Hi All again,

A separate point about the analysis of cufflinks data is the subject of
the Pseudo Autosomal Regions in X and Y - this will make a mess of gene
expression analysis in some cases especially because tophat will assign
a read to both places which therefore makes it a multihit read (which
you might then filter out) or it may double the true levels of reported
expression. Anyone had experience/thoughts on this?

Best Wishes,
David.

__
Dr David A. Matthews

Senior Lecturer in Virology
Room E49
Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine,
School of Medical Sciences
University Walk,
University of Bristol
Bristol.
BS8 1TD
U.K.

Tel. +44 117 3312058
Fax. +44 117 3312091

d.a.matth...@bristol.ac.ukmailto:d.a.matth...@bristol.ac.uk








___
The Galaxy User list should be used for the discussion of
Galaxy analysis and other features on the public server
at usegalaxy.org.  Please keep all replies on the list by
using reply all in your mail client.  For discussion of
local Galaxy instances and the Galaxy source code, please
use the Galaxy Development list:

   http://lists.bx.psu.edu/listinfo/galaxy-dev

To manage your subscriptions to this and other Galaxy lists,
please use the interface at:

   http://lists.bx.psu.edu/


--
Jennifer Jackson
http://usegalaxy.org
http://galaxyproject.org





--
Jennifer Jackson
http://usegalaxy.org
http://galaxyproject.org
___
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Galaxy analysis and other features on the public server
at usegalaxy.org.  Please keep all replies on the list by
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Re: [galaxy-user] Pseudo Autosomal regions in Chrs X and Y

2011-03-23 Thread Jennifer Jackson

Hi David,

Right now we don't have anything built-in to filter out this type of 
duplication automatically.


As a potential option, did you know that we offer a Canonical Female 
build for certain genomes? This may help with some of the duplication 
issues, if the loss of novel Y is OK for your project.


Please see:
https://bitbucket.org/galaxy/galaxy-central/wiki/GenomeData

Thanks for bringing up a good point!

Best,
Jen


On 3/10/11 8:44 AM, David Matthews wrote:

Hi All again,

A separate point about the analysis of cufflinks data is the subject of
the Pseudo Autosomal Regions in X and Y - this will make a mess of gene
expression analysis in some cases especially because tophat will assign
a read to both places which therefore makes it a multihit read (which
you might then filter out) or it may double the true levels of reported
expression. Anyone had experience/thoughts on this?

Best Wishes,
David.

__
Dr David A. Matthews

Senior Lecturer in Virology
Room E49
Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine,
School of Medical Sciences
University Walk,
University of Bristol
Bristol.
BS8 1TD
U.K.

Tel. +44 117 3312058
Fax. +44 117 3312091

d.a.matth...@bristol.ac.uk mailto:d.a.matth...@bristol.ac.uk








___
The Galaxy User list should be used for the discussion of
Galaxy analysis and other features on the public server
at usegalaxy.org.  Please keep all replies on the list by
using reply all in your mail client.  For discussion of
local Galaxy instances and the Galaxy source code, please
use the Galaxy Development list:

   http://lists.bx.psu.edu/listinfo/galaxy-dev

To manage your subscriptions to this and other Galaxy lists,
please use the interface at:

   http://lists.bx.psu.edu/


--
Jennifer Jackson
http://usegalaxy.org
http://galaxyproject.org
___
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Galaxy analysis and other features on the public server
at usegalaxy.org.  Please keep all replies on the list by
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[galaxy-user] Pseudo Autosomal regions in Chrs X and Y

2011-03-10 Thread David Matthews
Hi All again,

A separate point about the analysis of cufflinks data is the subject of the 
Pseudo Autosomal Regions in X and Y - this will make a mess of gene expression 
analysis in some cases especially because tophat will assign a read to both 
places which therefore makes it a multihit read (which you might then filter 
out) or it may double the true levels of reported expression. Anyone had 
experience/thoughts on this?

Best Wishes,
David.

__
Dr David A. Matthews

Senior Lecturer in Virology
Room E49
Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine,
School of Medical Sciences
University Walk,
University of Bristol
Bristol.
BS8 1TD
U.K.

Tel. +44 117 3312058
Fax. +44 117 3312091

d.a.matth...@bristol.ac.uk






___
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Galaxy analysis and other features on the public server
at usegalaxy.org.  Please keep all replies on the list by
using reply all in your mail client.  For discussion of
local Galaxy instances and the Galaxy source code, please
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  http://lists.bx.psu.edu/listinfo/galaxy-dev

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