present/absent on 2-color oligo arrays
1
0
Entering edit mode
Naomi Altman ★ 6.0k
@naomi-altman-380
Last seen 3.0 years ago
United States
I have been having an on-going discussion with a colleague about whether he can say that some genes are "absent" in some tissues based on two-color microarrays - most recently, Agilent arrays. There are a number of reasons that he would like to do this which are a mix of biology and QC. He wants to use some (arbitrary) normalized expression level, or unnormalized level above local background or a percentile of the whole array background or ... Any suggestions for papers about this? (We can both think of a dozen ways to do it, but without experiments to see if they are valid methods, or at least a paper to cite, I am reluctant to put the statistical seal of approval on any of them.) Thanks, Naomi p.s. In case anyone thinks that high-throughput sequencing is going to end this type of discussion, have a look at the interesting paper by 't Hoen comparing sequencing and microarray results. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?db=pubmed&cmd=Retrieve&list_u ids=18927111 Naomi S. Altman 814-865-3791 (voice) Associate Professor Dept. of Statistics 814-863-7114 (fax) Penn State University 814-865-1348 (Statistics) University Park, PA 16802-2111
Sequencing Sequencing • 845 views
ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode
Samuel Wuest ▴ 330
@samuel-wuest-2821
Last seen 9.6 years ago
Hi Naomi, I am doing work on AffyChips, but my samples are from amplified material with inputs from around 500pico - few nanogram range; I found that the Affy-Algorithmus "MAS5 calls" was not very happy with this type of data and thus compared expression values on the chip with an empirical negative-distribution (background-distribution), please refer to people.brandeis.edu/~dtaylor/Taylor_Papers/BIBE07_PANP.pdf for details (or the Bioconductor-package panp)... I worked on the Arabidopsis chip, and there are "negative" probes on the chip: probes that do not match DNA sequences from newer genome releases anymore... I found that by combining the panp-strategy and the information on negative probes on the chip, I could generate precise and relatively accurate predictions on the expression state of a gene (I can't give you all the details so far). So if there are negative controls/negative probes on the array, you could use them to generate an empirical background-distribution for each array and then compare your other signals to this.... Depends on how many negative probes you'd have... The method works well with the Affy HGU133-series, please refer to the above mentioned sources... Hope this helps?? Best, Sam 2009/1/30 Naomi Altman <naomi at="" stat.psu.edu="">: > I have been having an on-going discussion with a colleague about whether he > can say that some genes are "absent" in some tissues based on two- color > microarrays - most recently, Agilent arrays. There are a number of reasons > that he would like to do this which are a mix of biology and QC. > > He wants to use some (arbitrary) normalized expression level, or > unnormalized level above local background or a percentile of the whole array > background or ... > > Any suggestions for papers about this? (We can both think of a dozen ways > to do it, but without experiments to see if they are valid methods, or at > least a paper to > cite, I am reluctant to put the statistical seal of approval on any of > them.) > > Thanks, Naomi > > p.s. In case anyone thinks that high-throughput sequencing is going to end > this type of discussion, have a look at the interesting paper by 't Hoen > comparing sequencing and microarray results. > http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?db=pubmed&cmd=Retrieve&list _uids=18927111 > > Naomi S. Altman 814-865-3791 (voice) > Associate Professor > Dept. of Statistics 814-863-7114 (fax) > Penn State University 814-865-1348 (Statistics) > University Park, PA 16802-2111 > > _______________________________________________ > Bioconductor mailing list > Bioconductor at stat.math.ethz.ch > https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/bioconductor > Search the archives: > http://news.gmane.org/gmane.science.biology.informatics.conductor > >
ADD COMMENT

Login before adding your answer.

Traffic: 842 users visited in the last hour
Help About
FAQ
Access RSS
API
Stats

Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy.

Powered by the version 2.3.6