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Distance score and isoform match to mapped data for transcript-level quantification #158

Answered by andrewprzh
lianov asked this question in Q&A
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Dear @lianov

Thanks for a positive feedback and for bringing up this discussion!

  1. I am not sure I entirely got this statement, but sounds about right. Could you elaborate just in case?

  2. Yes, that's correct. IsoQuant assigns long reads based on the splice site matches. Moreover, the feature is reported only in there is at least one unique (unambiguous) read assignment.
    Thus, it may happen, for example, that in a certain cell there are 3 reads mapping to a gene, but none of there reads can be unambiguously assigned to an isoform. Thus, for this cell the reported gene count will be 3, but all isoforms will receive count 0.
    Thus it seems normal to see that per-cell you see more genes than i…

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@andrewprzh
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@lianov
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@lianov
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@andrewprzh
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