Dye-swap Design
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Jason Pear ▴ 90
@jason-pear-2309
Last seen 9.7 years ago
Dear Listers, We have a case-control study and would like to use Agilent 4x44K array. We only have three biological replicates. My questions are 1. Do we need to use technical dye-swap or we can use biological dye- swap (budget issue)? 2. How does the un-balanced dye-swap effect the analysis? 3. If we use biological dye-swap and balanced dye-swap, since we only have three samples for each condition. Can we pool samples in order to balance dye-swap? Here is the design: Array1 Array2 Array3 Array4 Red caseA controlB caseC pooled control Green controlA caseB controlC pooled case Many thanks, Jason _________________________________________________________________ Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft's powerful SPAM protection. [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
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Naomi Altman ★ 6.0k
@naomi-altman-380
Last seen 3.1 years ago
United States
1. Biological dye-swaps are fine. 2. It depends on whether there is a strong dye effect. Given my own experience, I think the dye effect observed by Churchill and Kerr, which was limited to a couple of probes, was real, but that much of the more pervasive effect reported by others can be attributed to technical problems with the dyes. So, carefully handled arrays, with dye protectorants, which not have much dye effect. 3. The pooled samples have smaller biological variance than the other samples. If the variance is dominated by technical variance (e.g. in an inbred species) your solution is reasonable. If it is dominated by biological variance, then you are artificially reducing the variance estimate that is used for your statistical tests. Regards, Naomi At 10:58 AM 11/2/2009, Jason Pear wrote: >Dear Listers, > > > >We have a case-control study and would like to use Agilent 4x44K >array. We only have three biological replicates. My questions are > > > >1. Do we need to use technical dye-swap or we can use biological >dye-swap (budget issue)? > > > >2. How does the un-balanced dye-swap effect the analysis? > > > >3. If we use biological dye-swap and balanced dye-swap, since we >only have three samples for each condition. Can we pool samples in >order to balance dye-swap? Here is the design: > > > > Array1 Array2 > Array3 Array4 > >Red caseA controlB >caseC pooled control > >Green controlA caseB >controlC pooled case > > > >Many thanks, > > > >Jason > > > >_________________________________________________________________ >Hotmail: Trusted email with Microsoft's powerful SPAM protection. > > > > [[alternative HTML version deleted]] > >_______________________________________________ >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 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
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