Loading report..

Highlight Samples

Regex mode off

    Rename Samples

    Click here for bulk input.

    Paste two columns of a tab-delimited table here (eg. from Excel).

    First column should be the old name, second column the new name.

    Regex mode off

      Show / Hide Samples

      Regex mode off

        Export Plots

        px
        px
        X

        Download the raw data used to create the plots in this report below:

        Note that additional data was saved in GSE53960_thymus_final_multiQC_report_data when this report was generated.


        Choose Plots

        If you use plots from MultiQC in a publication or presentation, please cite:

        MultiQC: Summarize analysis results for multiple tools and samples in a single report
        Philip Ewels, Måns Magnusson, Sverker Lundin and Max Käller
        Bioinformatics (2016)
        doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btw354
        PMID: 27312411

        Save Settings

        You can save the toolbox settings for this report to the browser.


        Load Settings

        Choose a saved report profile from the dropdown box below:

        Tool Citations

        Please remember to cite the tools that you use in your analysis.

        To help with this, you can download publication details of the tools mentioned in this report:

        About MultiQC

        This report was generated using MultiQC, version 1.18

        You can see a YouTube video describing how to use MultiQC reports here: https://youtu.be/qPbIlO_KWN0

        For more information about MultiQC, including other videos and extensive documentation, please visit http://multiqc.info

        You can report bugs, suggest improvements and find the source code for MultiQC on GitHub: https://github.com/ewels/MultiQC

        MultiQC is published in Bioinformatics:

        MultiQC: Summarize analysis results for multiple tools and samples in a single report
        Philip Ewels, Måns Magnusson, Sverker Lundin and Max Käller
        Bioinformatics (2016)
        doi: 10.1093/bioinformatics/btw354
        PMID: 27312411

        A modular tool to aggregate results from bioinformatics analyses across many samples into a single report.

        Report generated on 2026-05-21, 23:34 CDT based on data in: /scratch/g/akwitek/wdemos/GSE53960_thymus


        General Statistics

        Showing 130/130 rows and 6/9 columns.
        Sample Name% Alignable, M% AlignedM Aligned% Dups% GCM Seqs
        GSM1328725
        100.0%
        GSM1328725_SRR1170421
        28.1%
        45%
        24.2
        GSM1328725_SRR1170422
        27.2%
        45%
        21.9
        GSM1328725_STAR
        83.4%
        38.5
        GSM1328726
        100.0%
        GSM1328726_SRR1170423
        25.5%
        45%
        18.3
        GSM1328726_SRR1170424
        23.8%
        45%
        18.5
        GSM1328726_STAR
        85.3%
        31.4
        GSM1328727
        100.0%
        GSM1328727_SRR1170425
        26.0%
        45%
        22.4
        GSM1328727_SRR1170426
        25.7%
        45%
        23.1
        GSM1328727_STAR
        84.6%
        38.5
        GSM1328728
        100.0%
        GSM1328728_SRR1170427
        25.9%
        44%
        16.9
        GSM1328728_SRR1170428
        23.9%
        45%
        14.1
        GSM1328728_STAR
        84.9%
        26.3
        GSM1328729
        100.0%
        GSM1328729_SRR1170429
        21.8%
        46%
        18.2
        GSM1328729_SRR1170430
        29.9%
        46%
        14.7
        GSM1328729_STAR
        79.2%
        26.0
        GSM1328730
        100.0%
        GSM1328730_SRR1170431
        28.4%
        45%
        18.4
        GSM1328730_SRR1170432
        30.1%
        45%
        21.3
        GSM1328730_STAR
        80.2%
        31.8
        GSM1328731
        100.0%
        GSM1328731_SRR1170433
        25.9%
        45%
        16.6
        GSM1328731_SRR1170434
        24.3%
        45%
        14.7
        GSM1328731_STAR
        83.6%
        26.2
        GSM1328732
        100.0%
        GSM1328732_SRR1170435
        21.9%
        45%
        14.2
        GSM1328732_SRR1170436
        24.4%
        45%
        19.1
        GSM1328732_STAR
        84.3%
        28.1
        GSM1328733
        100.0%
        GSM1328733_SRR1170437
        29.0%
        45%
        25.8
        GSM1328733_SRR1170438
        28.0%
        45%
        24.0
        GSM1328733_STAR
        84.4%
        42.0
        GSM1328734
        100.0%
        GSM1328734_SRR1170439
        25.5%
        45%
        18.2
        GSM1328734_SRR1170440
        26.1%
        45%
        18.7
        GSM1328734_STAR
        85.0%
        31.4
        GSM1328735
        100.0%
        GSM1328735_SRR1170441
        26.3%
        45%
        17.5
        GSM1328735_SRR1170442
        25.3%
        45%
        16.7
        GSM1328735_STAR
        82.2%
        28.2
        GSM1328736
        100.0%
        GSM1328736_SRR1170443
        28.0%
        45%
        15.3
        GSM1328736_SRR1170444
        30.6%
        45%
        20.1
        GSM1328736_STAR
        80.2%
        28.4
        GSM1328737
        100.0%
        GSM1328737_SRR1170445
        33.7%
        44%
        19.1
        GSM1328737_SRR1170446
        36.2%
        44%
        22.2
        GSM1328737_STAR
        86.7%
        35.8
        GSM1328738
        100.0%
        GSM1328738_SRR1170447
        29.3%
        44%
        16.6
        GSM1328738_SRR1170448
        30.5%
        44%
        14.9
        GSM1328738_STAR
        87.6%
        27.6
        GSM1328739
        100.0%
        GSM1328739_SRR1170449
        27.7%
        44%
        20.1
        GSM1328739_SRR1170450
        30.8%
        45%
        30.7
        GSM1328739_STAR
        86.7%
        44.0
        GSM1328740
        100.0%
        GSM1328740_SRR1170451
        27.3%
        45%
        26.2
        GSM1328740_SRR1170452
        26.1%
        45%
        24.8
        GSM1328740_STAR
        85.7%
        43.7
        GSM1328741
        100.0%
        GSM1328741_SRR1170453
        27.9%
        45%
        23.4
        GSM1328741_SRR1170454
        26.4%
        45%
        21.4
        GSM1328741_STAR
        84.0%
        37.6
        GSM1328742
        100.0%
        GSM1328742_SRR1170455
        23.8%
        45%
        18.1
        GSM1328742_SRR1170456
        26.4%
        45%
        21.5
        GSM1328742_STAR
        84.7%
        33.6
        GSM1328743
        100.0%
        GSM1328743_SRR1170457
        27.9%
        46%
        12.9
        GSM1328743_SRR1170458
        29.6%
        46%
        15.4
        GSM1328743_STAR
        79.5%
        22.4
        GSM1328744
        100.0%
        GSM1328744_SRR1170459
        29.3%
        45%
        20.1
        GSM1328744_SRR1170460
        29.5%
        44%
        20.6
        GSM1328744_STAR
        83.5%
        34.0
        GSM1328745
        100.0%
        GSM1328745_SRR1170461
        26.2%
        46%
        18.5
        GSM1328745_SRR1170462
        26.6%
        46%
        19.0
        GSM1328745_STAR
        82.4%
        30.9
        GSM1328746
        100.0%
        GSM1328746_SRR1170463
        24.6%
        45%
        19.0
        GSM1328746_SRR1170464
        30.1%
        46%
        31.5
        GSM1328746_STAR
        84.2%
        42.5
        GSM1328747
        100.0%
        GSM1328747_SRR1170465
        34.3%
        46%
        23.8
        GSM1328747_SRR1170466
        31.5%
        46%
        19.9
        GSM1328747_SRR1170467
        29.3%
        46%
        19.0
        GSM1328747_STAR
        78.9%
        49.5
        GSM1328748
        100.0%
        GSM1328748_SRR1170468
        27.1%
        45%
        21.8
        GSM1328748_SRR1170469
        24.5%
        45%
        18.3
        GSM1328748_STAR
        84.0%
        33.7
        GSM1328749
        100.0%
        GSM1328749_SRR1170470
        23.2%
        45%
        13.7
        GSM1328749_SRR1170471
        25.0%
        45%
        16.7
        GSM1328749_STAR
        83.9%
        25.5
        GSM1328750
        100.0%
        GSM1328750_SRR1170472
        26.5%
        44%
        15.3
        GSM1328750_SRR1170473
        23.8%
        44%
        13.1
        GSM1328750_STAR
        85.9%
        24.4
        GSM1328751
        100.0%
        GSM1328751_SRR1170474
        25.4%
        45%
        20.1
        GSM1328751_SRR1170475
        25.5%
        45%
        20.4
        GSM1328751_STAR
        85.3%
        34.5
        GSM1328752
        100.0%
        GSM1328752_SRR1170476
        28.9%
        45%
        19.7
        GSM1328752_SRR1170477
        27.2%
        45%
        16.3
        GSM1328752_STAR
        83.8%
        30.1
        GSM1328753
        100.0%
        GSM1328753_SRR1170478
        44.9%
        43%
        17.3
        GSM1328753_SRR1170479
        49.3%
        44%
        32.8
        GSM1328753_STAR
        86.6%
        43.3
        GSM1328754
        100.0%
        GSM1328754_SRR1170480
        29.4%
        45%
        25.5
        GSM1328754_SRR1170481
        25.6%
        45%
        7.4
        GSM1328754_SRR1170482
        26.3%
        45%
        13.5
        GSM1328754_STAR
        80.7%
        37.4
        GSM1328755
        100.0%
        GSM1328755_SRR1170483
        35.7%
        45%
        29.3
        GSM1328755_SRR1170484
        35.3%
        45%
        29.1
        GSM1328755_STAR
        85.9%
        50.2
        GSM1328756
        100.0%
        GSM1328756_SRR1170485
        36.9%
        44%
        15.4
        GSM1328756_SRR1170486
        35.7%
        44%
        14.8
        GSM1328756_STAR
        86.3%
        26.1

        Rsem

        Rsem RSEM (RNA-Seq by Expectation-Maximization) is a software package forestimating gene and isoform expression levels from RNA-Seq data.DOI: 10.1186/1471-2105-12-323.

        Mapped Reads

        A breakdown of how all reads were aligned for each sample.

        loading..

        Multimapping rates

        A frequency histogram showing how many reads were aligned to n reference regions.

        In an ideal world, every sequence reads would align uniquely to a single location in the reference. However, due to factors such as repeititve sequences, short reads and sequencing errors, reads can be align to the reference 0, 1 or more times. This plot shows the frequency of each factor of multimapping. Good samples should have the majority of reads aligning once.

        loading..

        STAR

        STAR is an ultrafast universal RNA-seq aligner.DOI: 10.1093/bioinformatics/bts635.

        Alignment Scores

        loading..

        FastQ Screen

        Version: 0.15.1

        FastQ Screen allows you to screen a library of sequences in FastQ format against a set of sequence databases so you can see if the composition of the library matches with what you expect.DOI: 10.12688/f1000research.15931.2.

        Mapped Reads

        loading..

        FastQC

        Version: 0.11.9

        FastQC is a quality control tool for high throughput sequence data, written by Simon Andrews at the Babraham Institute in Cambridge.

        Sequence Counts

        Sequence counts for each sample. Duplicate read counts are an estimate only.

        This plot show the total number of reads, broken down into unique and duplicate if possible (only more recent versions of FastQC give duplicate info).

        You can read more about duplicate calculation in the FastQC documentation. A small part has been copied here for convenience:

        Only sequences which first appear in the first 100,000 sequences in each file are analysed. This should be enough to get a good impression for the duplication levels in the whole file. Each sequence is tracked to the end of the file to give a representative count of the overall duplication level.

        The duplication detection requires an exact sequence match over the whole length of the sequence. Any reads over 75bp in length are truncated to 50bp for this analysis.

        loading..

        Sequence Quality Histograms

        The mean quality value across each base position in the read.

        To enable multiple samples to be plotted on the same graph, only the mean quality scores are plotted (unlike the box plots seen in FastQC reports).

        Taken from the FastQC help:

        The y-axis on the graph shows the quality scores. The higher the score, the better the base call. The background of the graph divides the y axis into very good quality calls (green), calls of reasonable quality (orange), and calls of poor quality (red). The quality of calls on most platforms will degrade as the run progresses, so it is common to see base calls falling into the orange area towards the end of a read.

        loading..

        Per Sequence Quality Scores

        The number of reads with average quality scores. Shows if a subset of reads has poor quality.

        From the FastQC help:

        The per sequence quality score report allows you to see if a subset of your sequences have universally low quality values. It is often the case that a subset of sequences will have universally poor quality, however these should represent only a small percentage of the total sequences.

        loading..

        Per Base Sequence Content

        The proportion of each base position for which each of the four normal DNA bases has been called.

        To enable multiple samples to be shown in a single plot, the base composition data is shown as a heatmap. The colours represent the balance between the four bases: an even distribution should give an even muddy brown colour. Hover over the plot to see the percentage of the four bases under the cursor.

        To see the data as a line plot, as in the original FastQC graph, click on a sample track.

        From the FastQC help:

        Per Base Sequence Content plots out the proportion of each base position in a file for which each of the four normal DNA bases has been called.

        In a random library you would expect that there would be little to no difference between the different bases of a sequence run, so the lines in this plot should run parallel with each other. The relative amount of each base should reflect the overall amount of these bases in your genome, but in any case they should not be hugely imbalanced from each other.

        It's worth noting that some types of library will always produce biased sequence composition, normally at the start of the read. Libraries produced by priming using random hexamers (including nearly all RNA-Seq libraries) and those which were fragmented using transposases inherit an intrinsic bias in the positions at which reads start. This bias does not concern an absolute sequence, but instead provides enrichement of a number of different K-mers at the 5' end of the reads. Whilst this is a true technical bias, it isn't something which can be corrected by trimming and in most cases doesn't seem to adversely affect the downstream analysis.

        Click a sample row to see a line plot for that dataset.
        Rollover for sample name
        Position: -
        %T: -
        %C: -
        %A: -
        %G: -

        Per Sequence GC Content

        The average GC content of reads. Normal random library typically have a roughly normal distribution of GC content.

        From the FastQC help:

        This module measures the GC content across the whole length of each sequence in a file and compares it to a modelled normal distribution of GC content.

        In a normal random library you would expect to see a roughly normal distribution of GC content where the central peak corresponds to the overall GC content of the underlying genome. Since we don't know the the GC content of the genome the modal GC content is calculated from the observed data and used to build a reference distribution.

        An unusually shaped distribution could indicate a contaminated library or some other kinds of biased subset. A normal distribution which is shifted indicates some systematic bias which is independent of base position. If there is a systematic bias which creates a shifted normal distribution then this won't be flagged as an error by the module since it doesn't know what your genome's GC content should be.

        loading..

        Per Base N Content

        The percentage of base calls at each position for which an N was called.

        From the FastQC help:

        If a sequencer is unable to make a base call with sufficient confidence then it will normally substitute an N rather than a conventional base call. This graph shows the percentage of base calls at each position for which an N was called.

        It's not unusual to see a very low proportion of Ns appearing in a sequence, especially nearer the end of a sequence. However, if this proportion rises above a few percent it suggests that the analysis pipeline was unable to interpret the data well enough to make valid base calls.

        loading..

        Sequence Length Distribution

        All samples have sequences of a single length (50bp).

        Sequence Duplication Levels

        The relative level of duplication found for every sequence.

        From the FastQC Help:

        In a diverse library most sequences will occur only once in the final set. A low level of duplication may indicate a very high level of coverage of the target sequence, but a high level of duplication is more likely to indicate some kind of enrichment bias (eg PCR over amplification). This graph shows the degree of duplication for every sequence in a library: the relative number of sequences with different degrees of duplication.

        Only sequences which first appear in the first 100,000 sequences in each file are analysed. This should be enough to get a good impression for the duplication levels in the whole file. Each sequence is tracked to the end of the file to give a representative count of the overall duplication level.

        The duplication detection requires an exact sequence match over the whole length of the sequence. Any reads over 75bp in length are truncated to 50bp for this analysis.

        In a properly diverse library most sequences should fall into the far left of the plot in both the red and blue lines. A general level of enrichment, indicating broad oversequencing in the library will tend to flatten the lines, lowering the low end and generally raising other categories. More specific enrichments of subsets, or the presence of low complexity contaminants will tend to produce spikes towards the right of the plot.

        loading..

        Overrepresented sequences by sample

        The total amount of overrepresented sequences found in each library.

        FastQC calculates and lists overrepresented sequences in FastQ files. It would not be possible to show this for all samples in a MultiQC report, so instead this plot shows the number of sequences categorized as overrepresented.

        Sometimes, a single sequence may account for a large number of reads in a dataset. To show this, the bars are split into two: the first shows the overrepresented reads that come from the single most common sequence. The second shows the total count from all remaining overrepresented sequences.

        From the FastQC Help:

        A normal high-throughput library will contain a diverse set of sequences, with no individual sequence making up a tiny fraction of the whole. Finding that a single sequence is very overrepresented in the set either means that it is highly biologically significant, or indicates that the library is contaminated, or not as diverse as you expected.

        FastQC lists all the sequences which make up more than 0.1% of the total. To conserve memory only sequences which appear in the first 100,000 sequences are tracked to the end of the file. It is therefore possible that a sequence which is overrepresented but doesn't appear at the start of the file for some reason could be missed by this module.

        loading..

        Top overrepresented sequences

        Top overrepresented sequences across all samples. The table shows 20 most overrepresented sequences across all samples, ranked by the number of samples they occur in.

        Showing 20/20 rows and 3/3 columns.
        Overrepresented sequenceSamplesOccurrences% of all reads
        CTGGAGTCTTGGAAGCTTGACTACCCTACGTTCTCCTACAATGGACCTTG
        38
        889338
        0.0688%
        GGGAGATACCATGATCACGAAGGTGGTTTTCCCAGGGCGAGGCTTATCCA
        36
        972370
        0.0753%
        CTGGAGTGCAGTGGCTATTCACAGGCGCGATCCCACTACTGATCAGCACG
        31
        738730
        0.0572%
        ATCAAGTGTAGTATCTGTTCTTATCAGTTTAATATCTGATACGTCCTCTA
        25
        617672
        0.0478%
        CCCCACTACCACAAATTATGCAGTCGAGTTTCCCGCATTTGGGGAAATCG
        22
        471092
        0.0365%
        GTCGATGCGTGGAGTGGACGGAGCAAGCTCCTATTCCAACTCCTAGTTCC
        21
        479358
        0.0371%
        CTTGTTTTTACTTTAAATTAGTCTTTCATCATTCCCTTGCGGTACTTTCT
        12
        398163
        0.0308%
        CACGCCTGTAGTCCCAGCTACTCGGGAGGCTGAGACAGGAGGATCGCTTG
        10
        196744
        0.0152%
        CACAAATTATGCAGTCGAGTTTCCCGCATTTGGGGAAATCGCAGGGGTCA
        10
        250975
        0.0194%
        CTACAACCAACCAACATAACTAAACCCCCACATAAACTAAAACATTTAAC
        9
        312898
        0.0242%
        GATCGGAAGAGCACACGTCTGAACTCCAGTCACGATCAGATCTCGTATGC
        8
        448393
        0.0347%
        GATCGGAAGAGCACACGTCTGAACTCCAGTCACACAGTGATCTCGTATGC
        8
        405452
        0.0314%
        CAACCAACCAACATAACTAAACCCCCACATAAACTAAAACATTTAACTCA
        8
        233158
        0.0180%
        CTGCAATACCAGGTCGATGCGTGGAGTGGACGGAGCAAGCTCCTATTCCA
        5
        103971
        0.0080%
        CTAAGATCAAGTGTAGTATCTGTTCTTATCAGTTTAATATCTGATACGTC
        5
        108745
        0.0084%
        GATCGGAAGAGCACACGTCTGAACTCCAGTCACCAGATCATCTCGTATGC
        4
        139145
        0.0108%
        CGTTGATCAATAATTGGGTCAATAAGATATTAGTATTACTTTGACTTGTG
        4
        102245
        0.0079%
        CCCACTACCACAAATTATGCAGTCGAGTTTCCCGCATTTGGGGAAATCGC
        4
        76466
        0.0059%
        CCAGGCTGGAGTGCAGTGGCTATTCACAGGCGCGATCCCACTACTGATCA
        4
        99539
        0.0077%
        CTGGGCTAGGTTTATTTATTGTACATATATACTTTATTGAGATTTTTTTC
        3
        90613
        0.0070%

        Adapter Content

        The cumulative percentage count of the proportion of your library which has seen each of the adapter sequences at each position.

        Note that only samples with ≥ 0.1% adapter contamination are shown.

        There may be several lines per sample, as one is shown for each adapter detected in the file.

        From the FastQC Help:

        The plot shows a cumulative percentage count of the proportion of your library which has seen each of the adapter sequences at each position. Once a sequence has been seen in a read it is counted as being present right through to the end of the read so the percentages you see will only increase as the read length goes on.

        loading..

        Status Checks

        Status for each FastQC section showing whether results seem entirely normal (green), slightly abnormal (orange) or very unusual (red).

        FastQC assigns a status for each section of the report. These give a quick evaluation of whether the results of the analysis seem entirely normal (green), slightly abnormal (orange) or very unusual (red).

        It is important to stress that although the analysis results appear to give a pass/fail result, these evaluations must be taken in the context of what you expect from your library. A 'normal' sample as far as FastQC is concerned is random and diverse. Some experiments may be expected to produce libraries which are biased in particular ways. You should treat the summary evaluations therefore as pointers to where you should concentrate your attention and understand why your library may not look random and diverse.

        Specific guidance on how to interpret the output of each module can be found in the relevant report section, or in the FastQC help.

        In this heatmap, we summarise all of these into a single heatmap for a quick overview. Note that not all FastQC sections have plots in MultiQC reports, but all status checks are shown in this heatmap.

        loading..

        Software Versions

        Software Versions lists versions of software tools extracted from file contents.

        SoftwareVersion
        FastQ Screen0.15.1
        FastQC0.11.9