Hi Mark,
You are right, it's a typo for my contrast.matrix.
Thank you for your very helpful suggestions.
-Xiaokuan
________________________________
From: Mark Cowley <m.cowley0@gmail.com>
Cc: bioconductor <bioconductor@stat.math.ethz.ch>
Sent: Wed, June 9, 2010 10:47:12 PM
Subject: Re: [BioC] Repeat Measurement with Limma Fw: limma matrix
desgin question?
hi,
you could still treat each strain x time x treatment combo as a
separate group, ie 10 groups, and then use contrasts to compute the
average 0_t1 effect over the 3 mice, eg:
# i've reformatted you contrast matrix creation line -- i don't know
why you've duplicated your contrasts here
contrast.matrix<-makeContrasts(
0_t2-0_t1,
14_t2-14_t1,
14_t2-14_t1,
0_t2-0_t1
)
# alternative
contrast.matrix<-makeContrasts(
time0=(B6_0_t2+Balbc_0_t2+J129_0_t2)/3 -
(B6_0_t1+Balbc_0_t1+J129_0_t1)/3,
time14=(B6_14_t2+Balbc_14_t2+J129_14_t2)/3 -
(B6_14_t1+Balbc_14_t1+J129_14_t1)/3
)
i've just noticed your design is unbalanced with no Balbc_14_t2 or
J129_14_t1 groups. i'll leave it to you to adjust the relevant
contrasts to be the average of 2 groups.
cheers,
Mark
On 10/06/2010, at 12:06 PM, Xiaokuan Wei wrote:
> Mark,
>
> Thank you for your prompt response.
> In this experiment, I consider all these 3 strains are almost the
same (wild type). And there are only 3 mice, each received different
treatment at diffierent time. (Sorry, forgetting to mention this
important info, even 0 t1 and 0 t2 are received at different time).
> the repeated treatment to each mouse need to be included in the
model. That's why I average the technical replicates and then used
each mouse as block.
>
> I did try to use technical replicates as block. But I am not sure
how to capture the repeated measurements. The data frame I have here
is:
> V1 V2 V3 V4
> 1 1 B6 0 t1
> 2 2 B6 0 t1
> 3 3 B6 0 t1
> 4 1 B6 14 t1
> 5 2 B6 14 t1
> 6 3 B6 14 t1
> 7 1 B6 0 t2
> 8 2 B6 0 t2
> 9 3 B6 0 t2
> 10 1 B6 14 t2
> 11 2 B6 14 t2
> 12 3 B6 14 t2
> 13 1 Balbc 0 t1
> 14 2 Balbc 0 t1
> 15 3 Balbc 0 t1
> 16 1 Balbc 14 t1
> 17 2 Balbc 14 t1
> 18 3 Balbc 14 t1
> 19 1 Balbc 0 t2
> 20 2 Balbc 0 t2
> 21 3 Balbc 0 t2
> 22 1 J129 0 t1
> 23 2 J129 0 t1
> 24 3 J129 0 t1
> 25 1 J129 0 t2
> 26 2 J129 0 t2
> 27 3 J129 0 t2
> 28 1 J129 14 t2
> 29 2 J129 14 t2
> 30 3 J129 14 t2
>
> create factors (I only care time and treatment):
>
> f<-paste(df$V3,"_",df$V4,sep="")
>
> thus, we have factor: 0_t1,0_t2,14_t1,14_t2.
>
> create block using technical replecates:
> block<-rep(1:10,each=3)
>
> then make the design:
> design<-model.matrix(~ -1+factor(f, levels=unique(f))
> colnames(design)<-unique(f)
>
> biocor<-duplicateCorrelation(eset,desgin,block=block)
> fit<-lmFit(eset,design=design,block=block,correlation=biocor$consens
us)
>
>
> contrast.matrix<-makeContrasts(0_t2-0_t1, 14_t2-14_t1, 14_t2-14_t1,
0_t2-0_t1)
>
> As you can see from the above analysis, I just treat each set
experiment independently after considering technical replicates, and
did not include repeated measurement effects for each mouse into the
model.
> The goal here is to compare the t2 and t1 at day0 and day14. These 3
mice are considered pathologically same even they have some different
genetic background.
>
> Do you have any suggestion to include repeated measurement of each
mouse into the model?
>
> Thank you very much.
>
> -Xiaokuan
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> ________________________________
> From: Mark Cowley <m.cowley0@gmail.com>
>
> Cc: bioconductor <bioconductor@stat.math.ethz.ch>
> Sent: Wed, June 9, 2010 8:23:09 PM
> Subject: Re: [BioC] Repeat Measurement with Limma Fw: limma matrix
desgin question?
>
> hi Xiaokuan,
> i'd be treating the technical replicates as the block, and strain,
day and treatment as the biological effects of interest
> block <- rep(1:10, each=3)
> that way limma has triple the number of arrays to use in its
variance estimation
>
> you have a few options for your design matrix, such as strain + day
+ treatment + any interaction effects you're interested in
> or you can simply treat these samples as 10 different groups and
then setup contrasts to identify the effects of interest
>
> cheers,
> mark
> -----------------------------------------------------
> Mark Cowley, PhD
>
> Peter Wills Bioinformatics Centre
> Garvan Institute of Medical Research, Sydney, Australia
> -----------------------------------------------------
>
>
> On 10/06/2010, at 6:39 AM, Xiaokuan Wei wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> Dear List,
>>
>> I think I know how to do this with limma.
>> I first calculate the correlation treating each strain as a block
>> block<-rep(1:3,c(4,3,2))
>> biocor<-duplicateCorrelation(eset,design,block=block)
>> then
>> fit<-lmFit(eset,design=design,block=block,correlation=biocor$consen
sus)
>> then create contrast matrix and extract coef of each comparison.
>>
>> Is this right?
>>
>> However, I have a further question. In fact, each chip has 3
technical replicates. In order to simply the anlaysis, I just average
the replicates and then use limma to do the job.
>> How could I include such technical replicate information and repeat
measurement information together with using Limma. Could Gordon or
someone give me some hints or example?
>> Thank you very much.
>>
>>
>> replicate Strain Day Treatment
>> 1 B6 0 t1
>> 2 B6 0 t1
>> 3 B6 0 t1
>> 1 B6 14 t1
>> 2 B6 14 t1
>> 3 B6 14 t1
>> 1 B6 0 t2
>> 2 B6 0 t2
>> 3 B6 0 t2
>> 1 B6 14 t2
>> 2 B6 14 t2
>> 3 B6 14 t2
>> 1 Balbc 0 t1
>> 2 Balbc 0 t1
>> 3 Balbc 0 t1
>> 1 Balbc 14 t1
>> 2 Balbc 14 t1
>> 3 Balbc 14 t1
>> 1 Balbc 0 t2
>> 2 Balbc 0 t2
>> 3 Balbc 0 t2
>> 1 J129 0 t1
>> 2 J129 0 t1
>> 3 J129 0 t1
>> 1 J129 0 t2
>> 2 J129 0 t2
>> 3 J129 0 t2
>> 1 J129 14 t2
>> 2 J129 14 t2
>> 3 J129 14 t2
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> -Xiaokuan
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> ----- Forwarded Message ----
>
>> To: bioconductor <bioconductor@stat.math.ethz.ch>
>> Sent: Wed, June 9, 2010 11:53:57 AM
>> Subject: limma matrix desgin question?
>>
>>
>> Dear List,
>>
>> I have an experiment trying to evaluate two treatment for mice. I
have 3 normal strains, two treatment and two time points.
>> The goal is to compare t2 vs t1 Day14 vs Day0.
>> All these mice considered normal. So I can create factor such as
day0_t1, day0_t2, day14_t1, and day14_t2.
>> and make contrasts, such as day0_t2-day0_t1, day14_t2-day14_t1,
day14_t2-day14_t1...
>>
>> But how can I include strain information into the comparison? Since
each strain's data will be correlated?
>>
>> Thank you.
>>
>> Xiaokuan
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Strain Day Treatment
>> B6 0 t1
>> B6 14 t1
>> B6 0 t2
>> B6 14 t2
>> Balbc 0 t1
>> Balbc 14 t1
>> Balbc 0 t2
>> J129 0 t1
>> J129 0 t2
>> J129 14 t2
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
>>
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>>
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>
>
>
> [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
>
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