Data files

What is a Data file?
8 Data files matching the given criteria: (Clear all filters)

This is the fatty acid profile data from the freshwater portion of the feed switch trial. The last column has the sample ID eg: D0_MA-L-1/9_6 (Day 0, MA- Marine oil, L-liver, 1/9 sept 1, fish number 6

Fatty acid Systematic Name C14:0 Myristic acid myristin-syre C16:0 Palmitic acid palmitin-syre C16:1n7 Palmitoleic palmitolein-syre C17:0 C17:1 C18:0 stearic acid stearin-syre 18:1n9c oleic acid olje-syre C18:2n6c linoleic acid linolsyre C20:1 eicosenoic acid C18:3n3 linolenic acid linolensyre C20:2 ...

FPKMs or Fragments Per Kilobase of exon per Million reads . Fragment means fragment of DNA, so the two reads that comprise a paired-end read count as one. Per kilobase of exon means the counts of fragments are then normalized by dividing by the total length of all exons in the gene (or transcript). This bit of magic makes it possible to compare Gene A to Gene B even if they are of different lengths. Per million reads means this value is then normalized against the library size. This bit of magic ...

Column 1: Row numbers Column 2: Sample id (See below) Column 3: Water (Fish from salt water or fresh water) Column 4: Tissue (Liver or Gut) Column 5: Feed (MA- Marine oil, VO- Vegetable oil) Column 6: Day Column 7: Count file location

Column 2 explained: The freshwater fish have no tank numbers and saltwater fish do have tank numbers eg : 69-D0-MA-G-1 - > 69 well position (id given when sequncing), Day 0, Marine oil, Gut, Fish number 1 147-D16-VO-MA-L-6 -> 147 well position, Day 16, Vegetable ...

FPKMs or Fragments Per Kilobase of exon per Million reads . Fragment means fragment of DNA, so the two reads that comprise a paired-end read count as one. Per kilobase of exon means the counts of fragments are then normalized by dividing by the total length of all exons in the gene (or transcript). This bit of magic makes it possible to compare Gene A to Gene B even if they are of different lengths. Per million reads means this value is then normalized against the library size. This bit of magic ...

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